Showing posts with label LTE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LTE. Show all posts

Monday, May 18, 2020

Patent troll Sisvel files second case against Tesla in Delaware, asserting nine standard-essential patents from Nokia, LG, and BlackBerry

The automotive patent wars are heating up. On Wednesday, a key Nokia v. Daimler decision is going to be handed down in Munich. Meanwhile, Nokia's partners in crime are pretty active, too. Three weeks ago I reported on patent infringement complaints brought by a Nokia-fed troll, Conversant, against Tesla in the Western District of Texas and in Mannheim, Germany. In that post I also mentioned other pending litigation by contributors to the infamous Avanci patent pool against Tesla:

  • a lawsuit by Foxconn-owned Sharp in Japan, and

  • a case brought by patent troll Sisvel in the District of Delaware over former Nokia patents.

The latest news is that Sisvel stepped up its campaign on Friday (May 15, 2020) by filing a second Delaware complaint against Tesla (this post continues below the document):

20-05-15 DED20cv655 Sisvel ... by Florian Mueller on Scribd

The co-complainants are Sisvel and one of its subsidiaries, named 3G Licensing.

The prayers for relief do not include injunctive relief for the time being. It's just about money.

These are the nine patents-in-suit, all of which were declared essential to certain cellular standards (3G and 4G):

  • U.S. Patent No. 7,979,070 on "mobile equipment for sending an attach request to a network" (a former Nokia patent that was declared essential to the 4G/LTE standard)

  • U.S. Patent No. 8,600,383 on an "apparatus and method for making measurements in mobile telecommunications system user equipment" (a former BlackBerry patent declared essential to the 4G/LTE standard)

  • U.S. Patent No. 8,189,611 on a "system and method for resolving contention among applications requiring data connections between a mobile communications device and a wireless network" (another former BlackBerry patent declared essential to the 4G/LTE standard)

  • U.S. Patent No. 7,215,653 on "controlling data transmission rate on the reverse link for each mobile station in a dedicated manner" (a former LG patent declared essential to the 3G standard)

  • U.S. Patent No. 7,319,718 on a "CQI coding method for HS-DPCCH" (another former LG patent declared essential to the 3G standard)

  • U.S. Patent No. 7,661,625 on a "method of scheduling an uplink packet transmission channel in a mobile communication system" (a third former LG patent declared essential to 3G)

  • U.S. Patent No. 7,580,388 on a "method and apparatus for providing enhanced messages on common control channel in wireless communication system" (a fourth former LG patent declared essential to 3G)

  • U.S. Patent No. 7,869,396 on a "data transmission method and data re-transmission method" (a former LG patent declared essential to 4G/LTE and temporarily assigned to Thomson)

  • U.S. Patent No. 8,971,279 on a "method and apparatus for indicating deactivation of semi-persistent scheduling" (a patent filed by Thomson Licensing claiming priority to a patent originally filed by LG; declared essential to 4G/LTE)

So this is a typical "privateering" case, with operating companies--especially a couple whose core business (handsets) failed miserably--having transferred patents to a patent troll for the purpose of extracting royalties from makers of innovative products.

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn:

Tuesday, February 11, 2020

Nokia loses first German patent infringement case against Daimler: weak patent not essential to LTE

The devaluation of a dying company's overrated patent portfolio has begun today. At 9 AM local time, the Mannheim Regional Court announced its final judgment in the first of ten German Nokia v. Daimler patent infringement cases to have been adjudicated. As expected, the court with by far the best technical understanding of cellular standards in the world tosses Nokia's complaint over EP2286629 on a "method and apparatus to link modulating and coding scheme to amount of resources." Contrary to Nokia's assertion, the patent is a far cry from being essential to the 4G/LTE standard.

Industry insiders know that Nokia, which failed in the mobile handset market because it was more focused on saving costs than delivering a great user experience, had already lost many of its best engineers when most 4G/LTE-related patents were filed. In its official communications, Nokia talks about the tens of billions of euros it invested in research and development in years and, especially, decades past. But the 2010s were the decade when Nokia took a definitive downturn from which it's not going to recover, short of a Finnish Steve Jobs emerging somewhere.

As I mentioned in my previous post (on a Munich case that Nokia can only "win" if the court is happy to be overruled within a couple of months at the most), Nokia's SEP portfolio is largely untested. The only judgment I remember was one that Nokia lost in Mannheim to a tiny rival (ViewSonic). In a recent conversation, a German patent litigator who has asserted SEPs for different plaintiffs on numerous occasions told me that Nokia itself presumably doesn't even have a clue as to the strength of its cellular SEPs, just because they've typically always settled before decisions came down.

So far, the SEP litigation score is "Defendants 2, Nokia 0."

It's fairly possible that Nokia, if it can't settle with Daimler (which Daimler shouldn't do because Nokia owes its suppliers an exhaustive FRAND license), will lose all of its ten pending SEP cases against Daimler when all appeals (including the nullity cases before the Federal Patent Court) have been exhausted. In the meantime, Nokia will have to negotiate renewals with various major licensees in the smartphone segment, and those licensees are probably watching what happens in those automotive cases--and wondering what they're actually paying Nokia for (though they all pay a fraction on a per-unit basis of what Nokia wants from Daimler in contravention of EU antitrust law).

The next round of mediation talks (unreasonably requested by a European Commission shirking its competitoin enforcement duty so far) will take place now, and most likely, nothing will come out of it. The fact that Nokia's ten SEPs-in-suit may not inclde a single valid patent that is actually essential to a cellular standard won't help.

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn:

Wednesday, January 15, 2020

Nokia on losing track in LTE-essential patent infringement case against Daimler in Mannheim and rumored to struggle in Munich case, too

Next Tuesday (January 21, 2020), the Mannheim Regional Court is scheduled to hold a trial in a Nokia v. Daimler case over EP2286629 on a "method and apparatus to link modulating and coding scheme to amount of resources." With mediation having practically failed (though the mediators might invite everyone to another meeting, it wouldn't be likely to yield a result), the assumption is still that the trial will go forward.

Nokia is going to lose that one in all likelihood. Presiding Judge Dr. Holger Kircher notified the parties and the numerous intervenors (various Daimler suppliers) that, on a preliminary basis, his panel has concluded the patent-in-suit is not essential to the 4G/LTE standard--neither on the basis of a literal infringement theory nor the German equivalent of the Doctrine of Equivalents (DoE).

Therefore, the court doesn't anticipate that FRAND/antitrust matters, the most important one of which is whether Daimler's suppliers are entitled to an exhaustive component-level SEP license from Nokia, would be reached in this case.

Another Nokia v. Daimler case in Mannheim was supposed to go to trial last month, and was postponed (because the parties had agreed on mediation) to March 27.

The next Nokia v. Daimler court clash after next week's trial (which in all likelihood will just result in the rejection of Nokia's complaint on the grounds of non-infringement) will take place in Munich on February 6 (see this list of trial dates). Rumor has it that Presiding Judge Dr. Matthias Zigann of the Munich I Regional Court's 7th Civil Chamber recently indicated that Nokia's royalty demands from Daimler are not FRAND-compliant, in which case Nokia would be denied injunctive relief even if the patent was deemed valid and infringed (as the court thought at an early first hearing last June). I don't know whether the court's preliminary assessment of non-compliance with the FRAND licensing obligation is purely numerical (the royalty Nokia is seeking on a per-car basis is way out of line, but I don't know whether that's where the court has a concern) or related to non-monetary terms.

Things are not going well for Nokia at the moment, but a reversal of fortunes is always a possibility in these types of disputes.

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn:

Monday, July 29, 2019

Gaming the system: Qualcomm leverages 3GPP working group chairmanship to distort patent portfolio valuations

If you are already familiar with SEP portfolio valuation methods and their inherent shortcomings, you may wish to skip the introductory part (Basics) and jump straight to the part where I discuss specific issues with Qualcomm's conduct in connection with what is arguably the most central standardization process in the field of cellular telecommunications.

Basics

The valuation of standard-essential patent (SEP) portfolios is often performed in two steps: first, the value of all SEPs reading on the relevant standard is determined; second, the relative value of a given company's contributions to the standard is measured. In antitrust or contract cases raising FRAND questions, the inquiry may be limited to the second part, as a disproportionately high share of industry-wide royalties collected by one SEP holder can in and of itself serve to establish overcharging and unreasonableness. The latter is a huge problem for Qualcomm in the FTC antitrust case, given that Qualcomm collects approximately 25% of all wireless SEP royalties while being far below that percentage when it comes to its ownership position in wireless SEPs relative to the rest of the industry. Even Ericsson, a company that just suported Qualcomm's now-fully-briefed Ninth Circuit motion to stay the FTC's antitrust remedies, gave testimony in the FTC case that undermines Qualcomm's royalty demands. Ericsson believes to be the leader, and expressed the view that even Nokia's SEP portfolio appears more valuable than Qualcomm's.

For the purpose of determining the relative value of a given company's contributions to a standard, two inherently imperfect indicators are commonly looked at:

  1. the number of declared-essential patent families; and

  2. the number of contributions to the standardization discussion (so-called change requests).

Either approach is purely quantitative, not qualitative. But a qualitative analysis is rather costly and time-consuming even with respect to a single patent, making it practically impossible for a large portfolio. And the valuation of change requests can also be difficult, except for requests that are obviously devoid of any technical value, such as reports of mere typos or punctuation mistakes.

The specific problems of the first approach (counting declared-essential patent families) include the well-known problem of massive overdeclaration (driven by both the desire to capture as much of the value of a standard and the potential liability for undeclaring) and that of "opportunistic patenting". To explain the latter, I'll quote an instructive passage from Just-in-time inventions and the development of standards: How firms use opportunistic strategies to obtain standard-essential patents (SEPs), a paper authored by Byeongwoo Kang and Rudi Bekkers on behalf of the Eindhoven Center for Innovation Studies (ECIS) that examined the patenting behavior of participants in standard-setting and identified unusual filing activity around key standard-setting meetings:

"Our data reveals a strong relationship between patent timing and the occurrence of meetings. We observed a remarkable phenomenon that we call 'just-in-time-inventions': the patent intensity of about-to-become claimed essential patents is much higher during or just before these meetings than in other periods. At the same time, they are of considerably lower technical value ('merit'). This suggests that the just-in-time inventions are only beneficial to their owners, whereas for the public they merely invoke unnecessary costs. Finally, we observed that the phenomenon of just-in-time inventions is highly concentrated among specific types of firms, above all vertically integrated ones, and the incumbent champions of the previous technology standard." (emphasis added)

The market-driven and reality-centric solution to the problems I just outlined would be exactly what the FTC proposed in its opening statement in the FTC v. Qualcomm antitrust trial in January: SEP holders like Qualcomm should have to negotiate without undue leverage and, if necessary, prove the value of exemplary patents in court, where the validity and infringement of those patents can be challenged. The FTC didn't say so, but in the industry's opinion Qualcomm's SEPs tend to be very broad, making many of them more susceptible to invalidity than non-infringement contentions. Qualcomm's "No License-No Chips" policy has enabled the San Diego chipmaker to pretty much avoid "the moment of truth," and until earlier this decade, SEP holders drew enormous leverage from the threat of injunctive relief.

But most of the time, portfolio valuation--be it in negotiation or in portfolio-related litigation--is based on those two imperfect methods: DEP (declared-essential patent) counts and CR (change request) counts.

Specific issues

Qualcomm employee Wanshi Chen (the latter being the family name) is the chairman of the 3GPP RAN1 ("R1") working group ("WG"). That WG is "responsible for the specification of the physical layer of the radio [i]nterface" for all the major cellular standards from 3G to 4G (LTE) to 5G. 3GPP means "Third Generation Partnership Project." According to its website,

"The 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) unites [Seven] telecommunications standard development organizations (ARIB, ATIS, CCSA, ETSI, TSDSI, TTA, TTC), known as 'Organizational Partners' and provides their members with a stable environment to produce the Reports and Specifications that define 3GPP technologies.

"The project covers cellular telecommunications network technologies, including radio access, the core transport network, and service capabilities - including work on codecs, security, quality of service - and thus provides complete system specifications. The specifications also provide hooks for non-radio access to the core network, and for interworking with Wi-Fi networks.

"3GPP specifications and studies are contribution-driven, by member companies, in Working Groups and at the Technical Specification Group level."

For a company seeking to exercise a maximum of control over cellular standards development, it's hard, if not impossible, to think of a more influential position than the chairmanship of the RAN1 WG. For an overview of 3GPP WGs I recommend table 1 on page 6 of a document (PDF) available on Ericsson's website. 3GPP members have full access to certain stats on the "3GPP meetings for group R1" webpage. RAN1 WG meetings attract substantially more participants (typically around 450) than meetings held by other WGs.

Unfortunately, Mr. Chen's conduct raises very serious questions. There are extremely strong indications that he has been leveraging this position for the purpose of distorting DEP and CR counts to an extent that other industry players may view as a downright betrayal of the trust that was once placed in him. As in some other patent-related contexts, the proverbial fox appears to have been put in charge of the hen house.

Issue #1: sky-high number of SEP declarations

First, there's a conspicuously high number of SEP declarations by Mr. Chen compared to other current and recent 3GPP WG chairmen, as shown by the high-rising bluish line on the following chart based on IPlytics data (click on the image to enlarge; this post continues below the chart):

Mr. Chen was a very active patentee even before, but his current position gives him privileged access to information and generally a lot of influence over the standardization process.

The raw data underlying the chart comes from all SEP records where the chairmen or vice chairmen are listed as inventors or co-inventors. IPlytics is a particularly popular tool for researching patent databases. I have recently seen IPlytics-based charts in various articles and tweets by top-notch analysts. So far I have heard only good things about their service.

The number of SEP declarations per month was calculated by counting each patent family at most once per generation (taken from the "technology generation" field); if a declaration involves multiple generations, then the highest generation was used. For each patent family, the earliest declaration date of all patents with the same generation was used. The chart then shows the cumulative number of declarations on a monthly basis.

Mr. Chen was elected RAN1 chair in August of 2017. The chart shows filings by other chairmen and vice chairmen (of RAN1 as well as RAN2 and SA2) who held those positions for a comparable period of time. The chart furthermore shows the numbers for some ex-RAN1 chairmen. Note that Mr. Chen, prior to becoming cahirman, served as vice chairmen form August 2013 to August 2017. The following table shows the periods of chairmanship or vice-chairmanship for the relevant persons (format: MM/YY):

NameWGchairmanvice chairman
Wanshi ChenRAN108/17-NOW08/13-08/17
Havish KoorapatyRAN110/17-NOW---
Younsun KimRAN1---08/17-NOW
Richard BurbidgeRAN208/15-NOW---
Frank MademannSA204/15-04/19---
Satoshi NagataRAN108/13-08/1711/11-08/13
Matthew BakerRAN108/09-08/1308/13-08/17

The disproportionately high number of SEP declarations by Mr. Chen strongly suggests that he's taking advantage of his current chairmanship and already did so with respect to his prior vice-chairmanship.

Issue #2: rule changes for correction requests

Correction requests are one type of contribution to a standard-setting process. Their primary purpose is to fix issues as early as possible, ideally before any user of standards-compliant devices will be affected. Under 3GPP rules, any formal changes to a specification of an already-adopted standard require the submission of CRs in the sense of correction requests.

It's a well-known fact that some participants in standard-setting like to inflate the number of CRs such as by filing separate CRs even when they could--and conveniently would be--combined. And there can be duplicative or conflicting CRs, which is why it's undoubtedly necessary to consolidate overlapping CRs at the editorial stage. But Mr. Chen imposed new rules that were simply designed to deprive participants of the credit they deserve for valuable contributions, while crediting mostly just the section editors, not the original contributors.

Here's an example of a CR that an editor employed by Motorola Mobility submitted, but a proposal of the verry same substance had previously been rejected only because of the new rules imposed on the RAN1 WG by the Qualcomm-employed chairman (this post continues below the document):

36213_CR1162_(Rel-15)_R1-18... by Florian Mueller on Scribd

Instead of allowing submitters to use the standard form all the time, Mr. Chen insisted on a limit of one submission per company during a given period, and even required submissions to be made in standard text files (as opposed to using the submission form, as Motorola Mobility did in the above example, which resulted in rejection only because they used the standard form)--and the net effect is basically that the editor will then submit the CR in the name of the editor's company, without any credit to the original submitter.

I've obtained an email sent by Mr. Chen to the entire WG on June 26, 2018 ("Draft agenda for RAN1#94"), in which he reminded everyone of the rule that they should not use the standard CR template and of the one-CR-per-company limit:

---START QUOTE---

  • For those agenda items marked with “no individual CRs” – PLEASE, no individual CRs, only text proposals. Please also do NOT use CR template for your contribution. Rather, just use regular word document with proposals & TPs embedded instead.

  • For those agenda items marked with “single contribution restriction” – PLEASE, follow it STRICTLY. For example:

    • If any companies have with more than one contribution in the respective agenda items, the 2nd contribution and onward will be marked in red color and will NOT be treated.

    • The contribution itself CAN NOT be a “shell” contribution, which only contains references to other multiple contributions located e.g., in “others’ section. Each contribution has to be self-contained. The “shell” contributions will be marked in red color and will NOT be treated.

---END QUOTE---

Mr. Chen's overly strict rules were criticized by ETSI's Kai-Erik Sunell in an email on August 30, 2018 for being inconsistent with standard 3GPP rules:

"P.S. Frankly speaking, it is difficult for me to understand why you are asked to prepare these corrections on behalf of other companies. 3GPP working methods do not define any 'CR editors' and all 36.xxx specifications are already under change control which means that the rapporteurs of these specifications cannot serve as specification editors anymore. You (and everyone else) are, of course, welcome to serve as informal 'CR editor' if you like to volunteer for something like that but then, please, fill in all the coversheet fields as if the CR captured your own corrections. Please see below an extract from TR 21.900 Technical Specification Group working methods, subclause 4.1.2, https://portal.3gpp.org/desktopmodules/Specifications/SpecificationDetails.aspx?specificationId=555"

Mr. Sunell's title at ETSI is Mobile Competence Center Technical Officer. But ultimately the chairman decides the rules, and apparently the rules haven't really improved since.

"Credit where credit is due" is a good principle. It doesn't make sense that the RAN1 WG would credit only section editors of the specification but not the original submitters.

Of course, it does make sense for Qualcomm's purposes. But will the rest of the industry let one company set the rules for the most important 3GPP WG just because it decreases some other major patent holders' CR percentages? And how about Mr. Chen's disproportionately high number of SEP declarations?

I would encourage the membership of the RAN1 WG to raise the issues internally, and to think about the extent to which Qualcomm's corporate interests as a major patent holder and monetizer are aligned with the interests of the industry at large in encouraging and fairly crediting (with a view to future patent valuation discussions) all contributors.

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn:

Sunday, October 7, 2018

Irreconcilable discrepancies between Huawei's inbound and outbound patent licensing offers

More than three years after naming and shaming Ericsson's privateering deal with Optis Wireless (among a long list of similar partnerships), I became aware of the recent verdict against Huawei in the Eastern District of Texas, which serves to show how Huawei is torn between its strategic interests as a leading Android device maker on the one hand and an aggressive patent licensor on the other hand.

A corporation of that size is party to many disputes at any given point in time, and obviously the shoe will regularly be on the other foot. Parties don't make or change laws, so litigants can merely try to undermine (to a limited and often negligible extent) their adversaries' credibility by pointing to contradictions. However, in two respects such contradictions can be very significant:

  • FRAND licensing negotiations and disputes involve bona fide questions, making inconsistencies more problematic than in such a context as patent infringement.

  • We're all among the potentially billions of judges sitting on the court of public opinion, and some companies spend huge amounts of money on PR agencies and departments--or even on advertising campaigns like Qualcomm's big-time self-promotion in San Diego--to make us believe that they're the good guys. In that respect, it's a serious issue if they blatantly and brazenly apply double standards.

For an example, while Apple's positions on standard-essential patent (SEP) licensing have been perfectly consistent over the years, I really took issue and even got emotional when Apple's lawyers in the second California case against Samsung argued that a few narrow software patents entitled the iPhone maker to a "reasonable royalty"-type of damage award of $40 per device. Those weren't standard-essential, and if that claim had simply been based on lost profits, it would have been a different story. But they said "reasonable", and that's the R--the single most important letter--in "FRAND."

Samsung used to seek remedies over SEPs that I consistently disagreed with. I viewed their litigation tactics far more favorably when they dropped the related claims against Apple and even joined pro-FRAND organizations. Same with Google, by the way, but since it divested Motorola Mobility and contributed to an LTE patent pool, it's probably not going to be active again as a SEP enforcer in the foreseeable future.

If Huawei were a person, the diagnosis would be schizophrenia. Sorry to say so about one of my two favorite Android brands. According to Wall Street rumors, Huawei is (thankfully) part of the rebellion against Qualcomm. Just a couple of days ago, the FTC pointed to a 20-year-old Qualcomm filing that took the very opposite position on the FRAND licensing of rival chipset makers as Qualcomm is taking now. In Huawei's case, we're not talking about two decades in between. What we're seeing unfold here are parallel cases (Huawei's litigation with Samsung in the U.S. and China, and in parallel, PanOptis' litigation against Huawei in the U.S. and Germany, which provoked a Huawei countersuit in China for the purpose of a FRAND determination). It's like Huawei has to wear a different hat every 20 days, and at times every 20 hours, than change positions over the course of 20 years.

In the (Pan)Optis v. Huawei case in the Eastern District of Texas, the parties filed their proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law (after the recent jury trial and with a view to an upcoming bench trial) late last month--(Pan)Optis on the left side, Huawei on the right side. And some of what Huawei says is really interesting (this post continues below the document):

18-09-28 PanOptis v. Huawei Proposed Findings of Fact by Florian Mueller on Scribd

(Pan)Optis claims to have "acquired" (though it may actually be more of a service provider to Ericsson in economic terms) 63 SEP families. I haven't seen a comparable public claim by Huawei, but this Chinese study (in English, though) concluded that Huawei had declared slightly more than 600 patent families to be essential to 4G/LTE.

According to Huawei's own proposed finding of fact #58, "Huawei sent a letter to PanOptis indicating that it was willing to enter into a license to PanOptis’ U.S. declared essential patents for a rate of 0.09%, its EU declared essential patents for 0.056%, and its China and Rest of the World declared essential patents for 0.04%."

When I see a Huawei FRAND position that has a zero to the right of the decimal point, it immediately brings back to memory the FRAND rate that a Chinese court set, at Huawei's request, for InterDigital's SEPs: 0.019%.

Samsung claims that Huawei never substantially lowered its 1.5% royalty demand. Huawei denies that allegation, but without specificity (at least in the public redacted version of the relevant filing).

The recent Texas verdict related to five patents, four of which were standard-essential (and the jury awarded a far lower per-patent rate on each of those SEPs than on the non-SEP). While Huawei can--and according to a couple of more recent filings will--seek a judgment as a matter of law on the merits and on the damages award, for the time being (Pan)Optis has established the actual infringement of four presumed-valid SEPs, while Huawei has yet to prove anything in the United States. It has prevailed on a couple of patents in China, though.

The proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law in the Texas case also deviate from Huawei's positions in the Samsung despite with respect to whether one court should set a worldwide royalty rate:

"[DCL24] As discussed above, PanOptis has never given Huawei a U.S.-only offer. But, in view of PanOptis' decision to sue Huawei on its U.S. patents in a U.S. court, and in view of the very minor share of Huawei's sales in the U.S., and that Huawei has clearly stated its willingness to agree to and desire for a FRAND license covering its US sales, FRAND requires that PanOptis offer Huawei a U.S.-only license, rather than requiring that, in order to get a U.S. license to cover its minimal U.S. sales, Huawei also take a license in other countries where its sales are much greater (e.g., more than 60% in China) under foreign patents not at issue in this litigation. Despite Huawei repeatedly seeking a U.S.-only license and offering to settle the U.S. case, PanOptis has refused to discuss such options with Huawei."

"[DCL26] Like Motorola, PanOptis violates its FRAND obligations by suing Huawei on U.S. patents and insisting on a global license, despite Huawei's comparatively low sales in the U.S. and Huawei’s offer to enter into a U.S.-only license. Admittedly, Motorola sought an injunction against Apple in Germany, and PanOptis is seeking only damages against Huawei in U.S."

In the aforementioned bench trial opening brief, Huawei discourages the Texas court from setting a global FRAND rate:

"Further, as the Court recognized in limiting PanOptis' Count IX to U.S. patents [...], the Court should refrain from exercising its discretion to adjudicate FRAND issues as to foreign patents since doing so would necessitate determinations concerning the scope, infringement, and validity of non-U.S. patents governed by non-U.S. laws."

I agree--but why did Huawei ask the United States District Court for the Northern District of California to make a global FRAND determination in its dispute with Samsung? And why shouldn't Samsung firstly get the chance that Huawei actually had--even if only with respect to a handful of patents--in the Eastern of District (though it now has to get the verdict overturned, either by the district court or on appeal) to litigate its non-infringement and invalidity defenses?

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn:


Friday, April 10, 2015

The Google that has joined Via Licensing's LTE pool is the real Google--not the FRAND abuser

Yesterday's announcement that Google has agreed to make its LTE (4G) standard-essential patents, all or most of which previously belonged to Motorola, available through Via Licensing's LTE patent pool, is for all intents and purposes more meaningful than most settlements of patent disputes between industry players are. It means that Google is being Google again, and has distanced itself from the abusive conduct that gave rise to antitrust investigations in the U.S. (consent order) and Europe (decision, but no fine, which also looks like a compromise).

By "Google being Google again" I mean that the search giant and Android maker has given up on the notion that two wrongs (overwhelmingly meritless, at least impactless, patent assertions against Android on the one hand, and retaliatory abuse of FRAND-pledged standard-essential patents on the other hand) could make a right. Google temporarily used its SEPs in ways that ran counter to positions it was simultaneously taking on non-SEPs, even to the extent that Google, the parent company, submitted a public interest statement in an ITC proceeding that was amazingly inconsistent with what Motorola, the subsidiary, was saying in its own submission in connection with a parallel case. Also, Google's (ab)use of SEPs didn't really lend credibility to its positions on patent reform.

Now the "Don't Be Evil" company has apparently decided to become consistent again. In the LTE context Google is now aligned with companies that have never abused FRAND-pledged SEPs, some of which have even made significant efforts to advocate reasonable interpretations of FRAND. These are the other contributors to the Via Licensing LTE pool: AT&T, China Mobile, Clear Wireless, Deutsche Telekom, DTVG Licensing, Hewlett-Packard, KDDI, NTT DOCOMO, SK Telecom, Telecom Italia, Telefonica, and ZTE. Temporarily, Google's (Motorola's) FRAND positions were actually the same that some infamous SEP trolls and some failed businesses with an increasing or near-exclusive focus on patent licensing (and the privateers they feed with patents) tend to take.

This is the very Google that more than any other (IT) industry giant wants to make the world a better place through investments that the stock market doesn't reward in the short term but Google can afford, such as self-driving cars and "interventions that enable people to lead longer and healthier lives." More than any other large company I know, Google is truly about much more than just making money for its shareholders and other stakeholders. (Of course, this still doesn't give Google the right to violate antitrust rules in its core business, or to leverage excessive control over Android in anticompetitive ways.)

I find it hard to believe that the timing of the announcement--one day after an appellate hearing at which Google saw that it can't win the FRAND part of its Microsoft dispute, though it is winning the real war over Android royalties--is a coincidence. In that Microsoft v. Motorola case, Google's lawyers consistently argued that patent pool rates should not be used as an indicator of FRAND rates. Different standards (H.264 and WiFi) are at issue in that case, but still: Google wouldn't have wanted to undermine its anti-pool-rate argument. It certainly didn't want to give Microsoft's counsel the chance to mention its new position at the hearing, and if it had seen any realistic chance of Judge Robart's FRAND rate-setting opinion being overturned, it might have waited (possibly forever) with this move. Yes, this is speculative, but the connection is close and strong enough to support such a theory.

It's not clear whether Apple and Microsoft (which builds LTE devices as a result of the Nokia acquisition) will be able to benefit directly from Google's contribution to the Via Licensing LTE pool. With Apple, Google has a ceasefire in place, but no license deal (at least none that would have been announced). With Microsoft, it is still embroiled in litigation, though Microsoft hasn't brought any new offensive cases against Motorola in a while (at least none that would be discoverable).

Maybe Google's agreement with Via Licensing precludes Apple and Microsoft from licensing Motorola's LTE patents through that pool until comprehensive license agreements between those companies and Google are in place. In that case, Apple and Microsoft could still use the Via Licensing pool rates as pretty powerful evidence in any FRAND rate-setting dispute with Google.

Maybe Google doesn't even care if Apple and Microsoft license its LTE patents through that pool. Google could still assert older (3G) patents if necessary, as long as those haven't expired. And with the lack of success of Apple and Microsoft's patent assertions against Android devices so far, Google may not even be afraid and, therefore, may not feel it needs any leverage from LTE patents to counterbalance Apple and Microsoft's non-SEP enforcement. Apple started its enforcement against Android more than five years ago; Microsoft, more than four-and-a-half. After all this time, Google may be convinced that it doesn't need a good offense as its best defense because a defense-defense will always do the job to protect Android.

The main reason I used to criticize Google's position on patents so much was its inconsistency. It wanted to devalue non-SEPs while trying to gain undue leverage from SEPs. At first sight, one could also say that Apple and Microsoft are inconsistent because they want to bring SEP license fees down while exaggerating the value of non-SEPs. But FRAND-pledged SEPs are encumbered, and encumbrance is not a value enhancer. Consistency obviously depends on the particular arguments that are used and on whether any differences in value have a logical basis. For example, Apple is in my opinion being inconsistent by stressing its royalty base and "smallest saleable unit" point in connection with SEPs but arguing that even minor aspects of minor features (where the price of the smallest saleable unit, Android, is technically zero) make a substantial percentage of the entire value of a smartphone.

Overnight, Google has gone from "most inconsistent" to "most consistent" when it comes to patent licensing. This overnight change took years of litigation and a couple of antitrust investigations. Still it's great news, and I hope that some others, such as Apple, will soon match Google's level of consistency in this regard.

If you'd like to be updated on the smartphone patent disputes and other intellectual property matters I cover, please subscribe to my RSS feed (in the right-hand column) and/or follow me on Twitter @FOSSpatents and Google+.

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn:


Friday, February 7, 2014

HTC pays up for license to Nokia patents -- U.S. import ban could have been ordered on Monday

Nokia and HTC just announced the settlement of their patent infringement dispute spanning seven countries on three continents. HTC already had a license to Nokia's standard-essential patents (SEP) and "will [now] make payments to Nokia" for the use of its non-SEPs as well. Furthermore, it appears that Nokia will help HTC monetize its 4G (LTE) patents ("the collaboration will involve HTC's LTE patent portfolio, further strengthening Nokia's licensing offering).

All pending litigations around the globe are now dismissed immediately. On this coming Monday (February 10), the ITC was scheduled to rule on Nokia's first of two ITC complaints against HTC. The U.S. trade agency was reviewing a preliminary ruling that found HTC to infringe two Nokia patents. Affirmance of the preliminary ruling with respect to one or both patents would normally have led to a U.S. import ban.

A week ago, Nokia won its fourth German patent injunction against HTC in less than a year, and its third in only two months. Nokia's German litigations undoubtedly contributed to this resolution of the dispute.

I had blogged about this litigation on many occasions and, besides the parties and their counsel, attended more Nokia v. HTC patent hearings and trials than anyone else. Time and time again I predicted that HTC was ultimately going to take a royalty-bearing license. This is an important proof of concept for Nokia's patent monetization efforts.

HTC was countersuing Nokia over a couple of patents in Germany. The dismissal of all lawsuits between these companies also simplifies things with a view to the formal closing of Microsoft's acquisition of Nokia's wireless devices business. Microsoft and HTC entered into a patent cross-license agreement almost four years ago.

In late April/early May 2012, Nokia filed patent infringement lawsuits in the U.S. and Germany against HTC (only non-SEPs) and ViewSonic (SEPs and non-SEPs) as well as RIM/BlackBerry (only Germany, and only non-SEPs). RIM/BlackBerry was the first defendant to settle (in December 2012). In June 2013, Nokia reached a partial settlement with ViewSonic, which is now licensed to Nokia's SEPs but still defend itself against various Nokia non-SEPs in the U.S. and Germany (in some of those litigations, Google is an intervenor, as it was in some Nokia v. HTC cases).

In November 2013, without any prior litigation, Nokia announced the extension of a license agreement with Samsung. The scope of that deal was not specified. It may or may not involve Nokia's non-SEPs; it undoubtedly relates at least to its SEPs.

Not all but various of Nokia's patent assertions involve Android, Google's mobile operating system. Google is certainly going to continue to intervene in certain Nokia v. ViewSonic cases until that dispute is settled as well (which may happen rather soon now). Google may continue to pursue certain nullity (invalidation) actions against some of Nokia's patents-in-suit, while HTC will certainly withdraw those challenges now under the settlement agreement. The Federal Patent Court of Germany had scheduled its first two hearings in nullity actions targeting Nokia patents for next month. Google is presumably concerned about Nokia's claims that certain key Google services such as Google Maps and Navigation, as well as the VP8 video codec, infringe on some of its patents.

Apple settled a patent dispute with Nokia in June 2011 and later referred to that contract as a "provisional" standstill agreement for a limited period of time. According to a recent Samsung filing with a U.S. court, the Apple-Nokia deal is potentially in force until December 31, 2016, but Samsung may have focused on the maximum term without highlighting certain scenarios under which the parties might have to renegotiate sooner (possibly much sooner) than that.

If you'd like to be updated on the smartphone patent disputes and other intellectual property matters I cover, please subscribe to my RSS feed (in the right-hand column) and/or follow me on Twitter @FOSSpatents and Google+.

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn:


Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Google tries to get Rockstar's Android lawsuits transferred out of the Eastern District of Texas

On Halloween 2013, the Rockstar Consortium -- the winner of the 2011 Nortel patent auction -- brought patent infringement actions against Google and seven of its Android hardware partners (Samsung, Huawei, ZTE, LG, HTC, Pantech, and ASUSTeK) in the Eastern District of Texas. The lawsuit against Google itself involves seven "associative search engine" patents, while the seven patents-in-suit in the actions against Android OEMs cover a diversity of hardware and software features.

So far, no defendant has answered to the complaint. They were all granted extensions.

On Monday (December 23), Google filed a declaratory judgment lawsuit in the Northern District of California against Rockstar and its MobileStar Technologies subsidiary over the seven patents-in-suit in the Android OEM cases (this post continues below the document):

13-12-23 Google N.D. Cal. DJ Action Against Rockstar Consortium by Florian Mueller

The complaint contains a lot of rhetoric, accusing Rockstar of having "placed a cloud on Google's Android platform" and threatening "Google's business and relationships with its customers and partners, as well as its sales of Nexus-branded Android devices". One tidbit previously unknown to me is that "MobileStar [the subsidiary that is a co-plaintiff in the Rockstar suits against Android device makers) was formed for litigation one day before Rockstar filed its lawsuits against Google's customers". Other than that, it's the usual anti-troll rhetoric, blaming Rockstar's shareholders, with a particular focus on Apple, for the fact that Google's aggressive pursuit of the Nortel patent portfolio (as a matter of fact, Google won the "stalking-horse bid" in 2011) forced other industry players to join forces in order to clear the market of these patents. If not for Google's aggressive pursuit, these patents would have sold at a fraction of the price.

Google alleges that "Rockstar intends the Android OEM Actions to harm Google's Android platform and disrupt Google's relationships with the Android OEM Defendants". Google does not adduce any particular evidence at this stage; it just refers to an Ars Technica article.

I've previously commented on Google's hypocrisy in connection with patents, such as in an op-ed published last month on The Hill's Congress Blog, entitled "Sue when you're winning".

Presuambly none of the defendants wants the liability issues and remedies to be decided in the Eastern District of Texas. But in order to move the Rockstar Lawsuits out of Texas, they need to present a superior alternative. We'll see soon whether they all advocate that their lawsuits be moved to Northern California, where they could and would be consolidated with Google's declaratory judgment action, or whether some or all OEMs additionally bring declaratory judgment actions in districts where their U.S. subsidiary are based.

Rockstar will presuambly request that Google's DJ action be transferred to the Eastern District of Texas and consolidated with the earlier-filed infringement cases.

Quinn Emanuel filed the Northern California action on Google's behalf. Quinn Emanuel has already done, and continues to do, a lot of work for Android device makers (especially Samsung, HTC and Motorola). It remains to be seen whether all defendants agreed that QE should lead their collective defense, or whether some of them have other preferences.

The case was filed with the San Jose division (that's the one closest to Google's Mountan View HQ) and automatically assigned to Magistrate Judge Paul S. Grewal, known for his work on discovery disputes (including the "Patentgate" affair, which also involves QE) on the Apple v. Samsung cases Judge Lucy Koh is presiding over. If any of the parties declines to proceed before a Magistrate Judge, the case will have to be assigned to a United States District Judge. I'm sure Judge Grewal could handle a case like this just as well as any district judge, but chances are someone will want the case reassigned.

If you'd like to be updated on the smartphone patent disputes and other intellectual property matters I cover, please subscribe to my RSS feed (in the right-hand column) and/or follow me on Twitter @FOSSpatents and Google+.

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn:


Friday, November 1, 2013

Failed $4.4 billion bid for Nortel patents comes back to haunt Google and friends on Halloween

Almost two and a half years ago, Google lost the Nortel patents auction to a consortium of six industry leaders (Apple, BlackBerry, EMC, Ericsson, Microsoft, Sony) who just wanted to clear the market before anyone would abuse Nortel's patents, particularly its 4G/LTE patents, the way Google's Motorola Mobility still tries to abuse its standard-essential patents. The price for preventing abuse was $4.5 billion, several times what analysts expected before the auction. Google had won a "stalking-horse" bid, which was not the real game, with a $900 million bid. It famously bid pi billion dollars and other multiples of mathematical constants, showing a strange sense of humor with shareholders' money. Its highest bid, as is now documented in a publicly-accessible court filing, was $4.4 billion -- then it dropped out, Rockstar won, and Google later, in panic mode, wasted $12.5 billion on the acquisition of Motorola Mobility, over whose patents Google currently has precisely zero (you know, the number that looks like the letter O) enforceable injunctions in place against its rivals on a worldwide basis and whose video codec and WiFi patents entitle it to less than $2 million a year in royalties from Microsoft.

Fast forward to Halloween 2013. Apparently the Rockstar Consortium's efforts to subsequently negotiate patent license deals with Google and the wider Android ecosystem have been unsuccessful because at least eight Rockstar lawsuits were filed in the Eastern District of Texas: separate actions against Google, Samsung, Huawei, ZTE, LG, HTC, Pantech, and ASUSTeK. I don't know what happened in those negotiations, but maybe Google was a sore loser and tried to defy logic. The simple logic here is, in my view, that if you bid $4.4 billion for a patent portfolio (just not enough to win the auction), you can hardly dispute later that the patent portfolio in question is a treasure trove. And if you want to license a treasure trove, it costs you more than licensing something of little value such as some Motorola patents covering pre-World-War-II-style interlaced video and minor WiFi features. You can't just bid $4.4 billion -- thereby validating the portfolio in the commercially most meaningful way -- and later refuse to pay a significant amount for a license. This is, figuratively speaking, a case of venire contra factum proprium. No jury, whether in East Texas or elsewhere, is going to buy that.

No one can assert thousands of patents at the same time. Rockstar has now made its initial picks, and it presumably thought very carefully about which patents would likely give it leverage in litigation. It has apparently taken its time and tried hard to resolve the issue through licensing rather than litigation. But litigation turned out inevitable, and it surely prepared for that scenario, too. That's the nature of patent licensing.

There are two categories of lawsuits. A lawsuit against Google's core business -- its search engine -- involves different patents (all from the same family of associative search engine patents, which goes back to the time before Google was even founded!) than the seven lawsuits against certain Google hardware partners. Google has been proud of its own search engine patents, including the patent without which Google might not even exist today (the PageRank patent) or at least not be a monopolist. It now has to respect the work Nortel did in this area and which Google built on. It will have to pay up because Congress is not going to bail it out. The Rockstar Consortium is a co-plaintiff in all eight cases (Google and the OEM cases). Against Google, it is joined by its subsidiary NetStar Technologies, and by another subsidiary, MobileStar Technologies, against the device makers.

Defendants will presumably try to move these cases out of the Eastern District of Texas to other districts. It would be more efficient to keep at least the device maker cases in Texas since it's all about the same patents, but I can understand that defendants have different preferences. In Rockstar's case, resources are not going to be an issue. If necessary, it can pursue these cases in eight different districts in parallel, or bring even more lawsuits if others don't get the message from the Halloween lawsuits and continue to refuse to pay up.

I'll now publish the complaint against Google, followed by a list of the patents asserted against Google, and then the Samsung lawsuit (the lawsuits against the other device makers appear to be consistent), also followed by a list of the patents-in-suit.

13-10-31 Rockstar Patent Complaint Against Google by Florian Mueller

Patents-in-suit against Google

13-10-31 Rockstar Patent Complaint Against Samsung by Florian Mueller

Patents-in-suit against Google's hardware partners (Samsung, Huawei, ZTE, LG, HTC, Pantech, ASUSTeK)

Rockstar and MobileStar are seeking a permanent injunction ove the above patents.

Some of these device makers also build Windows Phone products, but the infringement allegations are limited to "mobile communication devices having a version (or an adaption thereof) of Android operating system", showing once again that Google's intellectual property stategy for Android is a failure that exposes its ecosystem to liability issues. Some of the infringement allegations appear to be Android-specific, possibly resulting in interventions by Google in the device maker lawsuits and suggesting that no one will be able to build Android devices without a license from Rockstar/MobileStar.

22 royalty-bearing Android patent license deals have already been announced. It also appears that Nokia has reached, or is very close to reaching, a tipping point in its dispute with HTC, which will result in another such deal pretty soon -- and not just a Nokia-HTC deal but deals between Nokia and the rest of the Android ecosystem (it's also negotiating with Samsung). And RockStar will strike patent license deals with each and every Android device maker. One Android device maker, Sony, is a member of the consortium -- and patent licensing could increase Sony's competitiveness within the market for Android devices.

By the way, as Intellectual Asset Management (IAM) magazine points out on Twitter, "[a]ccording to the FTC definition, Rockstar should not be regarded as a patent assertion entity (PAE)". Google got more help from U.S. antitrust regulators than any other company in this industry, but there's a limit even to that, and it will now be left to its own devices to sort out this situation. It can sort it out with money. A rather substantial amount of money, I guess.

If you'd like to be updated on the smartphone patent disputes and other intellectual property matters I cover, please subscribe to my RSS feed (in the right-hand column) and/or follow me on Twitter @FOSSpatents and Google+.

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn:


Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Google tries to keep the door open to 4G patent attacks on Apple products with Qualcomm chips

Several new documents were filed yesterday in the Apple v. Motorola Mobility anti-suit action in the Southern District of California, in which Apple is asking the court to bar the wholly-owned Google subsidiary from asserting cellular standard-essential patents (SEPs) against Apple products incorporating Qualcomm chips (except in the same district or in Germany, where a license agreement is in place based on a royalty rate to be determined by a court). Apple argues that Motorola is not allowed to bring such assertions under a license agreement it has in place with Qualcomm, as Qualcomm's customers are protected under the deal. A summary judgment motion filed by Apple on Friday indicates that Google's Motorola gives the word "customer" a meaning Apple finds inconsistent with dictionary definitions.

In my post on the Friday motion (which I just linked to) I discussed the potential impact of this Southern California case, which is scheduled to go to trial next spring. The Friday motion relates to Motorola's "termination" of the Qualcomm agreement with respect to Apple as a third-party beneficiary. According to a document of which Apple provided a public redacted version yesterday, "Qualcomm has repeatedly and unequivocally advised Motorola that Motorola's efforts to terminate are improper and ineffective".

Yesterday Motorola also brought a couple of (partial) summary judgment motions and a motion to exclude an expert. One of the PSJ motions is really interesting because it reveals that Google wants to at least preserve its right to assert Motorola's 4G (Long-Term Evolution, LTE) patents against Apple products incorporating Qualcomm baseband chips. It's heavily-redacted, but to me it's beyond reasonable doubt that this is what the motion is about. Here's the document, and further below I'll explain why this is about 4G/LTE:

13-10-28 Motorola Mobility Motion for Partial Summary Judgment Against Apple Re. Qualcomm Chips by Florian Mueller

The official title of the motion is "motion for partial summary judgment regarding Motorola's patents as applied to certain technology". Theoretically, this could be a lot of things. In practical terms, there's not a lot of possibilities. This is about Qualcomm baseband chips. We're talking about cellular communications technology.

The motion argues that "even if Apple were to prevail in establishing rights [under the Qualcomm-Motorola agreement], and even if the Court were to decide to issue a permanent injunction, Motorola moves the Court for partial summary judgment that the scope of any injunction could not encompass a prohibition against Motorola's future assertion of its patents as they apply to [REDACTED] against Apple's products due to their inclusion of Qualcomm components". So this is about excluding a certain technology from the scope of an injunction.

The redacted version of the motion indicates that the "certain technology" has a very short name. There are a couple of instances in which you can find the phrase "Motorola's patents as they apply", followed by a rather narrow black bar. Grammatically, it's clear that the redaction includes the preposition "to". Now, if there's a narrow bar and three of the characters it hides are T, O and a blank, then there isn't much left for the remainder. Two characters (4G), maybe three (LTE). But no more than that.

I read the whole motion, and while there's no definitive proof of this hypothesis due to redactions, there's nothing in the publicly-accessible part that suggests the assumption is wrong.

Motorola Mobility apparently claims to own about 9% of all patents declared essential to 4G/LTE.

Last year I watched a couple of Huawei-ZTE patent trials in Germany, and the question of whether a license agreement with Qualcomm does or does not extent to 4G/LTE also played a role in at least one of those litigations.

All in all, I had a very strong feeling that this is about 4G/LTE after reading the motion itself, and it became more than just a very strong feeling when I saw a declaration to which Motorola attached its exhibits. There are 14 exhibits. 12 of them relate to the ongoing litigation and the Qualcomm-Motorola deal. Two of them are about 4G/LTE:

7. Attached as Exhibit 5 is a true and correct copy of an article titled "LTE Overview" from 3GPP's website at http://www.3gpp.org/LTE.

8. Attached as Exhibit 6 is a true and correct copy of a press release dated December 1, 2010 from Verizon Wireless' website http://www.verizonwireless.com entitled "Verizon Wireless Launches the World's Largest 4G LTE Wireless Network on December 5".

In my opinion, this answers the question of what Google (Motorola) means by "certain technology". Nice try hiding this fact.

If you'd like to be updated on the smartphone patent disputes and other intellectual property matters I cover, please subscribe to my RSS feed (in the right-hand column) and/or follow me on Twitter @FOSSpatents and Google+.

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn:


Monday, June 24, 2013

ITC staff submissions a mixed blessing for Samsung in Apple, Ericsson patent cases

Today the Office of Unfair Import Investigations (OUII, commonly referred to as "the ITC staff") filed a response to an Ericsson motion for drastic sanctions against Samsung. Last week it filed a reply submission on the review questions and remedies issues in the investigation of Apple's complaint. The public redacted version of that one became available today. The ITC staff had strongly supported the import ban that the ITC recently ordered against Apple over a Samsung 3G standard-essential patent (1, 2). In the two investigations in which Samsung is defending itself against major tech rivals, the ITC backs Samsung's rivals on some issues but also takes positions that Samsung will consider helpful.

Investigation of Apple's complaint

The Commission, the six-member decision-making body at the top of the U.S. trade agency, is currently conducting an in-depth review of a preliminary ruling finding Samsung to infringe four Apple patents. The final decision will be due on August 1, 2013. In its first brief on review, the ITC staff already disagreed with Google's public interest argument, which the Android publisher had already filed at a much earlier stage of the investigation. More recently, politicians, carriers, activists and lobbyists filed a variety of public interest statements. In its reply submission the ITC staff responds to those.

According to the ITC staff, "the [more recent] statements can be divided into two categories: (1) statements from organizations or individuals concerned about the public interest effect on end-users of mobile telephones; and (2) statements from organizations that provide or support wireless services". The emphasis of the first group of statements is on the impact of an exclusion order, while the second group is more focused on "tailoring" an exclusion order. Basically, the ITC staff is not impressed by a flood of statements that don't add much substance to the debate. There are claims that consumers would be harmed, that other device makers can't meet the demand, that there should be a grace period to allow Samsung to modify its devices ("[f]or example, Sprint Spectrum recommends a six-month grace period but provides no explanation as to how it arrived at this number"), or that the bond (which Samsung would have to post during the 60-day Presidential Review period as well as any potential grace period for continuing the importation of devices held to infringe) shouldn't be too high, without proving or proposing anything specific.

The staff reiterates (it already said so in its opening brief on review) that it "would not oppose a grace period", but "there does not appear to be an adequate discussion of this issue". I agree that no one has so far explained why a grace period is necessary and why it should have a certain length. In particular, I haven't seen any argument as to why Samsung couldn't just import devices that come with the designarounds/workarounds it insisted to have adjudicated by the Administrative Law Judge.

Apple alleges that Samsung has continued importing infringing devices throughout the entire ITC investigation.

Investigation of Ericsson's complaint

Ericsson and Samsung are suing each other over dozens of patents, many of which have been declared essential to wireless industry standards, particularly 4G/LTE. They have litigation pending in federal court in Texas, and lodged complaints against each other with the ITC (Ericsson, Samsung).

A recent Ericsson motion for sanctions against Samsung for failure to comply with discovery obligations has brought to light an interesting SEP-related litigation tactic: Ericsson based its SEP-related infringement allegations on essentiality claims and said Samsung should disclose any products implementing the relevant standard(s) that it is importing or intends to import into the United States. Ericsson specified dozens of exemplary infringing devices at the outset, but it wanted Samsung to complete the list since it knows which standards its products implement. Samsung allegedly failed to disclose several dozen products implementing those standards at the appropriate time. Ericsson says Samsung disclosed 82 products in late May, one month after a key deadline, and has not moved component information (for example, which baseband chips are incorporated into certain handsets) with respect to 70 other products. On this basis Ericsson moved for the most drastic sanction possible: it asked the ITC to find in Ericsson's favor on a number of claims.

The ITC staff considers Ericsson's proposed sanctions exceedingly harsh. It recalls that "severe sanctions, including taking allegations as established, should only be imposed in extreme circumstances". In other words, Ericsson can't expect to win this case just because Samsung tried to stall. But the staff does "believe[] that at least some evidentiary sanctions are appropriate unless Samsung can either cure the deficiencies during the recently-extended discovery period or can show that it did, in fact, produce requested documents or that it is not at fault for the apparent deficiencies".

Due to an extension of a discovery deadline Samsung still has the opportunity to make up for shortcomings of previous disclosures, and Ericsson can still prove that dozens of Samsung products infringe certain patents.

If you'd like to be updated on the smartphone patent disputes and other intellectual property matters I cover, please subscribe to my RSS feed (in the right-hand column) and/or follow me on Twitter @FOSSpatents and Google+.

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn:


Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Canadian licensing firm WiLAN requests U.S. sales ban of BlackBerry's latest, LTE-capable devices

BlackBerry (previously known as Research In Motion) believes some injunctions based on standard-essential patents can be "procompetitive" (see 1, 2, 3). It promotes the -- sorry to say so -- wacko idea to curb patent litigation between major operating companies in this industry by allowing anyone who holds SEPs to seek sales bans over those in order to deter assertions of non-SEPs. The latest one became publicly available today: an amicus curiae brief basically supporting Google against Judge Posner (it's not worth further analysis here because it's consistent, in substance and quality, with BlackBerry's/Research In Motion's prior submissions, but I've uploaded it to Scribd for those who care to read it regardless). Maybe that company will realize just how bad an idea it is to promote SEP-based hold-up if the latest generation of its own devices is deprived of its 4G (LTE) capability by an injunction another Canadian firm is seeking in the United States: WiLAN today announced its filing of a patent infringement case against BlackBerry in the Southern District of Florida over a patent related to the 4G (LTE) standard.

The patent-in-suit is U.S. Patent No. 8,274,991 on a "protocol for allocating upstream slots over a link in a point-to-multipoint communication system". The exemplary accused product in this case is the BlackBerry Z10 as used on the AT&T network. Paragraph 17 of the complaint contains a standards-based infringement allegation:

"The use of Defendants' LTE Products for uplink transmission over an LTE network results in performing a method for obtaining uplink transmission bandwidth as claimed in the '991 Patent. Upon information and belief, the protocol for making uplink bandwidth requests is a built-in capability that is automatically executed when a user uses Defendants' LTE Products to communicate over an LTE network."

The induced-infringement theory basically says that by encouraging end users to use LTE, BlackBerry instructs them to infringe the patent-in-suit.

In one of its prayers for relief, WiLAN is seeking "{b]oth preliminary and permanent injunctions against Defendants and their officers, agents, employees, attorneys, and all persons in active concert or participation with them, prohibiting infringement of the '991 Patent".

If you'd like to be updated on the smartphone patent disputes and other intellectual property matters I cover, please subscribe to my RSS feed (in the right-hand column) and/or follow me on Twitter @FOSSpatents and Google+.

Share with other professionals via LinkedIn: