Showing posts with label Mosaid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mosaid. Show all posts

Thursday, May 21, 2015

Nokia and Ericsson seek to justify their privateering ways, defend patent transfers to NPEs

The debate over privateering (patent transfers by large operating companies to so-called non-producing entities or patent assertion entities) is in full swing, and it will be with us for a while. The week before last I made a call for input in an effort to build a smartphone-related privateering directory. This week, IAM (Intellectual Asset Management) magazine politely disagreed with my approach, and I respectfully disagree with them.

At the heart of that disagreement is the question of whether infringers unwilling to take a license are the real issue. IAM thinks so; I don't. When the "smartphone patent wars" started in 2010, and in the following two to three years, I also believed that more companies should take licenses and felt that certain right holders had a reasonable basis for asserting their IP in court. But what has come out of all those lawsuits so far does not support claims of massive patent violations: most smartphone patent lawsuits go nowhere and even the few assertions that do succeed usually don't have meaningful results. in this field of technology (which is a large one because smartphones are highly multifunctional) I can now understand each and every defendant who isn't impressed by claims to infringe many patents held by someone. I wouldn't have thought back in 2010 that Motorola still hasn't felt forced to take an Android patent license from Microsoft after four and a half years of crossjurisdictional litigation. But that's the way it is (unless there's a reversal of fortunes down the road) and I can't blame others for "doing a Motorola" when they face royalty demands.

Smartphone patent assertions are so vastly unsuccessful that I've arrived at the conclusion the term "intellectual property" is a propagandistic misnomer for smartphone patents. I still like IP as a term for patents in a field where the system may work, for copyright, for trademarks, and for certain other categories of rights that are reasonably reliable. IPRs will never come with the degree of legal certainty that real property provides and I understand that. However, when the vast majority of assertions turn out meritless and the few that have merit in a formalistic, legalistic sense are still unimpressive from a technical/commercial point of view, transaction costs are totally out of proportion and the value of most of those patents is not in the "innovation" they allegedly protect but in the ability to force someone to spend money on legal defense and in the off-chance that one of the asserted patents may beat the odds and have some real impact in the end.

Most right holders and IP professionals still claim that patents, even smartphone-related patents, should be treated like real property, but Congress wouldn't be looking at the reform proposals that are currently on the table if lawmakers truly believed that the patent system was all about the legitimate protection of innovation. No one would seriously make similar proposals with respect to real property. It's just for political reasons that even those favoring far-reaching reform frequently repeat the mantra of how beneficial the patent system is to innovation. Saying the opposite would be unwise with a view to international trade negotiations and would draw massive protest from various large organizations. But when even the largest and most well-known companies in the smartphone industry fail with most of their patent assertions, something is fundamentally wrong, the system is increasingly detached from the notion of protecting true innovators, and more reform is needed.

Just like patent enforcement is structurally different from the enforcement of real property rights, it also makes sense to treat (at least in this field of technology) patent transfers differently from other asset sales.

Nokia and Ericsson have issued statements to IAM (cited in the blog post I linked to in the first paragraph) on their patent transfers to patent assertion entities (PAEs). They basically told IAM that those deals are beneficial, but they don't explain why companies with such vast resources and enormous sophistication (in-house and externally, in legal and in technical respects) need help from little guys with a controversial business model to do license deals with the very same licensees with which they've already done deals before and do deals with all the time.

They also fail to explain why a number of major right holders generally don't sell patents to PAEs. For example, I'm not aware of Qualcomm doing this. Or IBM (all the IBM patent sales I know about were to operating companies such as Google and Twitter). Or even Microsoft. While Microsoft has been criticized by some for providing funding for the Nokia-Mosaid deal, for the way it structured its acquisition of Nokia's wireless devices business (sort of a "reverse privateering" deal) and for funding Intellectual Ventures even at a time when almost everyone else in the industry didn't want to be associated with it anymore, even Microsoft's critics can't deny that it has built an enormously successful licensing business with well over 1,000 licensees--and it runs this business itself, without having to transfer patents to trolls.

Privateering is a huge and important issue, and there's no way to discuss all of its aspects in one post. For the remainder of this post I just want to comment quickly on a few things Nokia and Ericsson said in their statements:

  • Both companies say the acquirers of their SEPs (to the extent that SEPs are involved) have to fulfill their FRAND licensing commitments. The problem is not that the acquirers would claim the patents weren't encumbered. The key issue is that those companies have previously taken positions on the royalty rate for their portfolios. For example, on page 3 of this American Bar Association Document you can see that Nokia and Ericsson publicly announced a 4G (LTE) royalty rate of 1.5% each. But when such right holders sell parts of their portfolio to third parties, there's no longer a guarantee that the collective royalty demand implementers of the standard will face about the patents presently and formerly held by the respective right holder would still not exceed that limit. If a plurality of patent holders of what used to be a single portfolio makes a collective demand that is not FRAND, privateering becomes a means of circumventing or vitiating FRAND licensing obligations.

  • Nokia touts its "relatively young portfolio" and continuing innovation but it has far fewer engineers on staff than it had a few years ago and in its dispute with HTC I saw it assert mostly very old patents.

  • Nokia claims that "the majority [of its patent divestments in recent years] have been to operating companies." That means they must have sold patents to many operating companies since at least ten deals with PAEs are documented. But the only Nokia patent sale to an operating company that I can find on Google is that certain design (not technical) patents were given to Microsoft along with the handset business. So the other deals are either secretive or they aren't talked about because it's the deals with PAEs that raise issues. Even if Nokia had publicly announced patent tranfers to hundreds of operating companies, that fact still wouldn't justify privateering in the slighest.

    (As for transparency, IAM says Nokia and Ericsson have been more transparent than, for example, BT. I don't see any indication for that. It's just that BT transferred patents to privately held entities, which don't have to make SEC filings, unlike Unwired Planet or Mosaid. And some of the transferred patents showed up in litigation or prosecution before any announcement had been made by anyone.)

  • Ericsson says transferring patents to PAEs "is a way for innovators to get a fair return faster on their significant investment and contribution to the eco system." I could see an acceleration of a licensing business in a case where an acquirer makes a substantial upfront payment. But Unwired Planet received thousands of Ericsson patents without having to pay anything initially. Ericsson can't seriously say that this is a faster road to revenues. For example, Unwired Planet sued Samsung after Ericsson had agreed with Samsung on a new license deal. It would undoubtedly have been faster to include those patents in the deal Ericsson did with Samsung directly than to have Unwired Planet assert those patents against Samsung later.

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Tuesday, May 12, 2015

Privateering: let's name and shame companies that feed patent trolls -- please help complete the list

Privateering--the act of large companies giving patents to patent assertion entities (PAEs)--is (unfortunately) not illegal (yet), but it is abusive, antisocial behavior. It pollutes the legal environment and harms the economy. It has nothing to do with protecting legitimate innovation: legitimate innovators suffer from it because it drives up litigation and licensing costs, and deep-pocketed, sophisticated legitimate patent holders don't need third parties to strike deals with their industry peers. Privateering also gives patents in general and patent transfers in particular a bad name.

I'm asking you for your help to shed some light on this problem. Below you can find the first version of my list of known privateering deals, and if you're aware of any other verifiable transactions of this kind, please fill out this blog's contact form. I need a link to a press release or other public statement, a trustworthy media report, or a publicly accessible court filing. Sources won't be disclosed. The industry focus here is on everything relevant to smartphones (including mobile network infrastructure), tablet computers, and the various technologies they incorporate (such as operating systems and multimedia codecs).

There's no deadline for this. Depending on how much input I receive and when, I'll update the list, maybe once, maybe several times. In the very near term I may also add items to the list below.

So far it appears that no company has engaged in troll-feeding to nearly the same extent as Nokia (which celebrates its 150th anniversary today). By contrast, only one sale of Apple patents to a patent troll is known, and that was a long time ago, so privateering is not in Apple's DNA despite this regrettable but apparently isolated incident. So let's build a comprehensive list of privateering transactions.

[Update] First, thanks to those who have already proposed additions to the list above (most of which I've already incorporated). Second, I got some reactions on Twitter from IP professionals taking issue with the term "patent trolls" and fearing that this was a "witch hunt." Let me assure you that I used the term "patent trolls" in the headline just to increase the likelihood of people seeing this on Twitter and contributing information to the list. Obviously the patent licensing/assertion entities listed above aren't all the same in terms of how they act. There are differences. As for the operating companies, I've bought products from most of them, used Ericsson products indirectly (their base stations) and have said positive things about another company's products just based on what I learned about them from reliable sources. This blog here is mostly read by people with a strong, typically professional interest in IP issues: an audience that I believe is for the most part interested in shedding light on privateering transactions, not in name calling. This "crowdsourcing" effort was my idea and I didn't even discuss it with anybody before I went ahead and did this post. The idea came up because I had a hard time finding out about how the scope and scale of Nokia's troll-feeding compared to that of others, though it was clear to me from the beginning that Nokia was the worst offender in this respect, by far and away. [/Update]

[Update 2] I've received an email from a reader who said "[a] patent privateer not only receives patents from an operating company to pursue competitors, but also returns money to that operating company." In some cases it is verifiable that this is the case (Unwired Planet, Mosaid). In other cases the contract terms are not known. Feeding "patent trolls" is a bad thing and harms the selling company's peers regardless of specific terms, though I do agree that pseudo-transfers such as in the Unwired Planet case are the most problematic deal type. If you're aware of more pseudo-sale type of deals, please point me to publicly verifiable information and I may (though I can't promise that I'll find the time, or when) talk about them the way I talked about Ericsson's contract with Unwired Planet. [/Update 2]

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Friday, June 1, 2012

Nokia calls Google's EU antitrust complaint "frivolous" and a waste of time and resources

I just reported on Google's EU antitrust complaint against Microsoft and Nokia, and subsequently saw that Nokia has meanwhile issued a statement. I'll now quote it, and comment on it, passage by passage:

"Though we have not yet seen the complaint, Google's suggestion that Nokia and Microsoft are colluding on IPR [Intellectual Property Rights] is wrong. Both companies have their own IPR portfolios and strategies and operate independently."

In my first reaction I already mentioned that after about a year of investigating, the ITC didn't see any evidence for anticompetitive conduct. That fact lends credibility to Nokia's denial.

Nokia appears to form all sorts of issue coalitions as opposed to being Microsoft-aligned. For example, it advocates a new SIM card standard together with Motorola Mobility (i.e., Google) and RIM. In that context, Nokia and Motorola agree that they (and others) should receive FRAND royalties on their related intellectual property, while Apple advocates royalty-free licensing.

"Nokia has made regular patent divestments over the last five years."

Patent transfers from and to non-practicing entities are a reality. Google itself plays that game. Google also did a patent deal with Mosaid last year. Chances are that Mosaid used some or all of the $11 million it received from Google to fund its efforts to monetize those former Nokia patents. Last year, Intellectual Ventures, which also received funding from Google at some point, filed a lawsuit against Motorola, a couple of months after Google had announced its intent to acquire Motorola. Through its voluntary dealings with those entities, which go beyond mere license deals (or settlements), Google financially contributes to the industrialization of patent monetization, and sometimes this comes back to haunt Google.

My personal take on non-practicing entities has always been that there's nothing wrong with the concept known as division of labor, provided that the patents they monetize are legitimate. In terms of which patents should and should not be granted, I don't agree with any large tech company, whether it's Apple, Google, IBM, Microsoft, Nokia, or Oracle.

"In each case, any commitments made for standards essential patents transfer to the acquirer and existing licenses for the patents continue. Had Google asked us, we would have been happy to confirm this, which could then have avoided them wasting the commission's time and resources on such a frivolous complaint."

Two days ago I just reported on an important development in a UK litigation brought by IPCom against Nokia. The court told IPCom that it wasn't going to get an injunction against Nokia over a standard-essential patent in light of a FRAND licensing commitment IPCom made in 2009 with respect to standard-essential patents it had acquired from Bosch. That FRAND declaration enabled IPCom to avoid formal EU antitrust investigations that might otherwise have resulted from a Nokia complaint. While a company's voluntary commitment (IPCom even said that it never denied its FRAND obligations) doesn't make new law, the European Commission clearly achieved that everyone in the industry realized that Brussels doesn't want companies to shed their FRAND licensing obligations by selling standard-essential patents to third parties. And Nokia's complaint had enabled this.

It should always have been clear that Nokia, which complained about the Bosch-IPCom deal a few years ago, would adhere to the same standard it advocated in a similar context.

"We agree with Google that Android devices have significant IP infringement issues, and would welcome constructive efforts to stop unauthorised use of Nokia intellectual property."

I'm sure Google would deny that its EU complaint concedes that "Android devices have significant IP infringement issues". But Nokia presumably bases this claim on the fact that Google wouldn't have to worry about Mosaid's assertion of former Nokia patents if it was sure of its (and its partners') ability to defeat such claims in court.

Courts in several countries have found Android to infringe third-party patents. That's a fact.

"Nokia has an active licensing program with more than 40 licensees. Companies who are not yet licensed under our standard essential patents should simply approach us and sign up for a license."

Google's Motorola would likely say the same, but there's a fundamental difference between Nokia's licensing business and Motorola's assertions of standard-essential patents against Apple and Microsoft. Motorola was unable to show to the ITC even one license deal that had terms consistent with what it demanded from Apple and Microsoft. Judge Shaw wrote in his initial determination on a Motorola complaint against Microsoft that "there is no evidence that any company would agree to the offer that Motorola sent to Microsoft". Instead, "the evidence supports Microsoft's conclusion that Motorola was not interested in good faith negotiations and in extending a [F]RAND license to it". So far, there's no indication whatsoever that Nokia makes prohibitive demands.

When the European Commission launched formal investigations of Motorola's enforcement of standard-essential patents in April 2012, Motorola had already started to enforce a German injunction over a standard-essential wireless patent against Apple and was only about a month away from winning a couple of injunctions against Microsoft over two patents allegedly essential to the H.264 video codec standard (which it cannot enforce -- for now -- due to an order by a U.S. court). The Commission's investigations against Samsung started before any Apple products were actually shut down, but that's simply because Samsung has not yet won an injunction despite bids in several countries. As far as Mosaid is concerned, the only lawsuit over former Nokia patents that I'm aware of targets Apple (in the United States).

In my opinion, FRAND abuse can happen even prior to a lawsuit being filed, such as by making Googlorola-style demands that are only meant to pave the way for seeking injunctive relief. But it's impossible for antitrust authorities to investigate every holder of standard-essential patents at all stages. Regulators have to set priorities and focus on real issues. Thus far, Google's allegations are far too vague to give the impression that this is a good use of regulatory resources. There are indications that Google is playing a political game here, hoping that the Commission will have to look into the Mosaid conspiracy theory only in order to avoid the impression of being biased against Google. But the fact that some companies, including Google itself (through its newly-acquired subsidiary Motorola) abuse standard-essential patents doesn't mean that every complaint in this wider context will result in formal investigations.

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Google's EU antitrust allegations against Microsoft and Nokia were dismissed by the ITC

The latest news on the smartphone patents front is old wine in new bottles: Google filed an EU antitrust complaint against Microsoft and Nokia, blaming the two companies for collusion involving a non-practicing entity, Mosaid, which acquired 2,000 patents from Nokia in September 2011. It's not just "old wine" but actually a concoction that failed to pass even the low hurdle of a basic plausibility test by the United States International Trade Commission. It failed that test at the ITC no less than three times: the Office of Unfair Import Investigations (which defends the public interest in ITC investigations), Judge Theodore Essex (in a summary determination) and the six-member decision-making body at the top of the ITC all agreed that there was no antitrust-related or other kind of patent misuse claim against Microsoft and Nokia. An entire set of "patent misuse" theories including the Mosaid story was considered so frivolous that the ITC didn't even want to waste time on this at a trial at which an all-star team of antitrust lawyers wanted to square off with Microsoft.

Interestingly, Barnes & Noble, the company that formally hired those lawyers (though Google may have contributed to the effort), has meanwhile entered into a strategic partnership with Microsoft, something that B&N certainly wouldn't ever have considered if it had truly believed that Microsoft was evil. On a related note, Google itself did a patent deal with Mosaid (at about the same time as the Nokia-Mosaid deal).

The ITC is a trade agency with quasi-judicial authority, not a court, but it does look at antitrust defenses, provided that they're remotely plausible. The chairman of the United States Federal Trade Commission, a competition authority, indicated at a conference this week that the FTC may formally file its concerns about the pursuit of injunctive relief over standard-essential patents (SEPs) with the ITC. Google subsidiary Motorola Mobility is trying to win import bans and cease-and-desist orders against Apple and Microsoft over SEPs. But the ITC already has Google/Motorola figured out: in an initial determination, Judge David Shaw concluded that "Motorola was not interested in good faith negotiations and in extending a [F]RAND license" to Microsoft and made demands that no reasonable company could have accepted in Microsoft's position.

That flagrantly unFRANDly behavior on Motorola's part -- which Google endorsed and apparently intends to continue (if not to ratchet up) -- is the reason for which the European Commission launched two formal antitrust investigations against the now-Google subsidiary in April.

Now that it's bought into Motorola's antitrust problems, Google as a corporate group has a greater diversity of antitrust problems than any company in the history of this industry has ever had on its plate. IBM had mainframe-related antitrust problems for decades. Microsoft was fined by the European Commission on two counts (Media Player and file server interfaces). But Google faces a host of antitrust issues. Europe's top competition enforcer, European Commission Vice President JoaquĆ­n Almunia, just gave Google an ultimatum to come up with proposals relating to several claims of abuse of its dominant market position in search (article, statement as Word document). And there are the two Motorola investigations. Also, South Korea's Fair Trade Commission just raided Google's Seoul office again over Android-related abuse suspicions.

Being suspected of abuse is not the same as being convicted. However, where there's so much smoke, it's hard to imagine that there's no fire. Vice President Almunia wouldn't have given Google an ultimatum in public if the hard investigate work of his Directorate-General for Competition (DG COMP) had not uncovered some serious evidence.

By contrast, the ITC didn't have any such thing as evidence against Microsoft, Nokia and Mosaid in its files after about a year.

Google's complaint comes down to transparent diversionary tactics. Instead of addressing the European Commission's concerns, especially the ones concerning Motorola (which the ITC and FTC apparently share), Google makes the proverbial Hail Mary pass and attempts to conflate the serious issues surrounding its own conduct with a conspiracy theory that the ITC already threw out.

As a European taxpayer, I think companies from all over the world should have access to our world-renowned EU antitrust regulators, but they shouldn't waste the scarce resources of those agencies with conspiracy theories that were already found wanting by governmental agencies in their own countries. So far I don't see why Mosaid is a particularly European issue. I've eyewitnessed at European courts what Motorola and Samsung are doing with their patents over here, but I'm not aware of any wrongdoing by Mosaid at this stage (all I read about is that they filed a U.S. lawsuit against Apple over some of those former Nokia patents). I'm against patent abuse by anyone, but Google doesn't appear to have any factual basis. For now, it just cries "conspiracy!"

Unless Google provides some serious evidence, the European Commission can reject this complaint without any risk of appearing biased. The hurdle for such evidence must be reasonably high given the ITC's consistently negative conclusions.

[Update] Nokia calls Google's complaint "frivolous" and a waste of time and resources. [/Update]

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