Showing posts with label Siemens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Siemens. Show all posts

Thursday, October 1, 2020

Siemens tells easily disproven untruth to German government with respect to judicial practice in feedback to draft patent reform bill

Today's Nokia v. Lenovo standard-essential patent (SEP) injunction is just the latest--and for sure won't be the last--in a string of German patent rulings that underscore the need for serious reform. Absent forceful legislative intervention, various German patent judges and their "forum-selling" mentality will turn their jurisdiction into a tool for extortion that will cost the real (product-making) economy dearly and enrich only those whose business model or career is all about patent litigation.

Stakeholders had until Wednesday of last week (September 23) to provide feedback the latest draft patent reform bill (the second one to be published) by the Federal Ministry of Justice of Germany. Yesterday the ministry published the submissions (almost all of which were written in German) on its website.

All in all, the reactions validate my initial assessment that the second draft constituted a major improvement over the first one from the perspective of defendants:

  • Those who had previously made it clear that no injunction reform would be the best reform reiterate that view and are sure to point out that the first draft would yet be the lesser evil from their perspective than the second. A chemical industry association had already taken that position in a statement to financial daily Handelsblatt in early September.

  • Those who advocate meaningful reform recognize that progress has been made, but most of them appear to think the draft statute doesn't go far enough. I never said that the first draft was perfect, but what surprised and impressed me was that it clearly departed from the previous informal pledge of allegiance to the case law of the Federal Court of Justice on patent injunctions.

In my previous post on this reform process I outlined the procedural steps that remain--and the risk of reform opponents running out the clock, in which case the most likely outcome would be an unhelpful pseudo-reform.

With a view to last week's submissions, I'd like to share just three more observations:

  • Reform opponents keep making multiple submissions (with Siemens effectively being behind at least three, and having influenced a couple more, submissions, but also the aggressive patent abusers of Nokia and Ericsson utilizing more than one channel) while pro-reform forces, apart from Nvidia and Deutsche Telekom, make the mistake of communicating with politics only through their industry associations. Some pro-reform players stand for huge numbers of jobs in Germany, giving them every right to make corporate statements beyond whatever watered-down positions result from association-internal consensus building.

    Your focus on consensus is part of the mentality that prevents Germany from being a major player in the Digital Economy. It's about preserving the things of the past instead of coming up with better solutions for the future. It's what makes large German companies appear like dinosaurs in a world increasingly belonging to revolutionaries.

  • While Siemens is hyperactive in lobbying, I wouldn't trust their head of IP in this context as far as I could throw him, considering the things I heard him say on a conference call in the spring (with members of the German parliament) and his other statements, including his written submissions, on this topic.

    Siemens's feedback to the second draft reform bill is wrong in so many ways I can't address them all, but one is very easy to demonstrate and shows they don't strive to be truthful or, more likely, don't care to do their research homework before making an official submission to their government. In the fourth section of that letter, Siemens says that the latest SEP jurisprudence in Germany--to wit, Sisvel v. Haier, Nokia v. Daimler in Mannheim, Sharp v. Daimler in Munich)--"shows [...] that the courts are very much capable of taking into consideration the proportionality of remedies--such as through the requirements for collateral--in their decisions."

    No. Not only do those decisions fail to address proportionality in light of the EU's enforcement directive (banning complex multifunctional products over minor features) but the collateral in Sharp v. Daimler is chump change relative to what's at stake: 5 million euros and a half. Even considering Daimler had told the court that Sharp's exhaustive component-level license deal with Huawei reduced the impact of an injunction by 86%, that tiny amount (over which Sharp could post a bond or which it could deposit) is ridiculous even for just 14% of Daimler's Germany-wide sales. Siemens should recognize this mistake and resubmit its statement after at least deleting its reference to that case.

    Today's ruling in Nokia v. Lenovo is another example of the new Munich minimalism when it comes to security--and maximalism when it comes to SEP enforcement.

    While it is true that the Mannheim Regional Court's Nokia v. Daimler injunction comes with a huge requirement for collateral (€7 billion), there are SEP holders (from outside of Europe) who actually have the liquidity to make such a deposit and enforce--and the appeals court could lower the amount anytime, though fortunately it convinced Nokia to commit to refrain from enforcement while Daimler's motion for an enforcement stay is pending.

    As for the impact of Sisvel v. Haier, it took only one week for the first decision to come down and validate my prediction that "more unhinged" SEP injunctions were going to come down in Germany as a result of that (mis)guidance by the Federal Court of Justice.

  • While Siemens is just annoying, Ericsson is at least funny.

    They seriously tell the German government in their submission--more than once and always in bold-face letters--that the new draft injunction statute would make Germany less attractive and relevant a patent litigation venue. That's a crazy argument to make in an economic policy context. The name of the game is what's best for the economy and, by extension, for consumers, and not for the patent litigation industry. There's nothing desirable about being a patent litigation hotspot for the economy at large.

I'll keep following this reform process. The next step will be for the ministry to finalize its position in light of the feedback it just received.

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Saturday, November 9, 2013

Judge now feels sanctions against Samsung and its attorneys over Patentgate are warranted

A few days before the Apple v. Samsung limited damages retrial in the Northern District of California, there is again some news concerning the "Patentgate" scandal over improper disclosures of highly confidential business information from Apple's license agreements with other parties including Nokia, Ericsson, Sharp, and Philips by Samsung's lawyers to their client. It now appears likely that Samsung and its ouside lawyers from the Quinn Emanuel firm will be sanctioned, but only after the retrial: a further hearing has been scheduled for December 9, 2013. Originally the court aimed to resolve the matter ahead of the retrial. If any of the sanctions relate to the use of licensing information at a trial, the retrial, which is only about Samsung's infringement of Apple's patents and not about the standard-essential patent (SEP) licensing issues relevant to many of Samsung's asserted patents, is less important anyway than the trial that will be held in the second litigation between these parties in the same district starting March 31, 2014.

After Samsung's chief licensing executive Dr. Ahn allegedly told Nokia in a licensing negotiation in Korea in June that his lawyers had disclosed to him the terms of the Apple-Nokia settlement, Nokia complained to the California court. Apple moved for sanctions and further discovery, and Nokia joined that motion. In early October an order by Judge Grewal on this matter and a hearing transcript brought the affair to light. Samsung appealed the order to Judge Koh, who totally supported Judge Grewal. Judge Koh, who will also preside over the impending retrial, criticized the conduct in question even more harshly, finding the disclosures "improper" and Samsung's lack of cooperation "inexcusable".

A couple weeks later, after Samsung provided some sworn declarations, especially one by Dr. Ahn contradicting Nokia's representation of the June meeting all the way, another hearing was held. At that hearing, Judge Grewal said he was not yet convinced that sanctions were warranted, and decided that the next step should be an in camera ("in chambers") review of documents over which Samsung had claimed privilege but of which Apple doubted that they were legitimately withheld from its lawyers.

Meanwhile, Samsung and Nokia announced the extension of some patent license agreement, but as I wrote in my coverage of that post, I believe it was a SEP-only license deal and the parties probably still have to sort out non-SEP licensing issues. Also, I'm not aware of Nokia having withdrawn its support for sanctions against Samsung over the Patentgate disclosures, though I wouldn't rule out that this could happen as a result of the recent Nokia-Samsung deal.

Judge Grewal's latest order (published further below) came down on Friday evening local time. These are the most interesting parts:

  • The question at this stage appears to be what sanctions the court should impose on Samsung and Quinn Emanuel:

    "Having finally crawled out from under the boxes [full of material submitted for in camera review], it appears to [Judge Grewa] that if anything was breached, it was this court's protective order, and that sanctions against Samsung and its attorneys are warranted."

    "[F]rom the arguments and evidence submitted, an outline does emerge suggesting sanctions should issue based on the following violations of its protective order: [...]"

  • Judge Grewal agrees with Apple that Samsung's assertions of privilege were overreaching. At the very least, the court wants Samsung to provide until November 15 (next Friday) more of a justification for privilege because "the court thus far is unpersuaded that the generic statements in the [privilege] log meet the burden required to claim that protection". Samsung is given another opportunity for briefing only "out of an abundance of caution". Also, "[t]he court will not tolerate further efforts to deny outside counsel access to discovery not truly subject to privilege or work product protections". Judge Grewal notes that "[b]y maintaining these seemingly unwarranted [privilege] claims, Samsung significantly burdens not only Apple and Nokia's ability to address the sanctions issue, but also the [judge]'s ability to tell the full tale of what he has seen". As you might imagine, I'm eager to see "the full tale of what [Judge Grewal] has seen" and to share it with you soon.

  • Samsung failed to meet the court's deadlines for submitting material for the in camera review. Footnote 9 says "Samsung submitted the last of its documents only [the day before the order, i.e., Thursday]".

  • There will be some further inquiry by the court into what happened at the June 4 meeting between Nokia and Samsung. Among other things, Nokia will have to produce to Samsung the Powerpoint presentation it used in that meeting.

  • A previously unknown fact is that Samsung made what the court considers "wrongful use of the disclosed [information] in preparing for [...] its negotiations and arbitrations with Ericsson between May 2012 and May 2013".

  • Ericsson appears to be increasingly interested and involved in this issue. The order also says that "[c]ounsel for Apple, Nokia, and Ericsson may be present for the entirety of all depositions taken in accordance with this order."

  • One of Judge Grewal's questions relates to the extent to which Apple kept the terms of its license agreements with Nokia, Ericsson, Philips and "Siemans" (sic) confidential. So far I thought this was about license agreements with Nokia, Ericsson, Philips, and Sharp. Now Sharp is not mentioned, but Siemens is. Maybe a future order will shed light on this.

  • "Samsung and its counsel are invited to file a brief by December 2, 2013 to show cause why sanctions should not issue for [the identified] violations. Apple and Nokia also may submit a brief by this same date proposing appropriate sanctions. The parties shall address both the legal framework and the evidence relevant to any sanction to be imposed."

This doesn't look good for Samsung. After Judge Grewal recently declared himself unconvinced of the need for sanctions, I thought Samsung and its lawyers might get away with what they've done, but now they are under reasonably serious pressure again. The Northern District of California is not the only venue in which the Patentgate affair could lead to sanctions. An Apple motion for sanctions is also pending at the ITC, and Justice Annabelle Bennett of the Federal Court of Australia recently appeared to be losing her patience with Samsung in this context.

Here's the Friday order:

13-11-08 Patentgate Order to Show Cause by Florian Mueller

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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Presumptive Acacia subsidiary sues HTC, LG, ZTE, BlackBerry over Nokia Siemens Networks patents

Nokia's wireless patents are ubiquitous. In addition to Nokia's direct monetization, a number of ex-Nokia patents have been sold to different licensing firms, who occasionally try to enforce such patents in court. Last week I noted that Intellectual Ventures' second patent infringement lawsuit against Google's Motorola Mobility involves, among other things, two former Nokia patents. Yesterday a handful of lawsuits against wireless device makers and carriers by what appears to be an Acacia subsidiary were filed in the Eastern District of Texas, and they are all about former Nokia Siemens Networks patents. The assignment record of at least one of the patents-in-suit reveals Acacia's involvement. In late December, Nokia Siemens Networks, a telecommunications infrastructure maker, entered into a license agreement with Acacia and a few days later (on December 31, 2012) Acacia announced that "a subsidiary has acquired patents for Wireless Infrastructure and User Equipment Technology from Nokia Siemens Networks relating to second (2G), third (3G) and fourth (4G) generation wireless technologies".

Cellular Communications Equipment LLC, whose name never showed up on the Internet prior to yesterday's patent infringement complaints, brought separate lawsuits targeting HTC, LG, ZTE, BlackBerry (Research In Motion) and Pantech. Each of these complaints also targets wireless carriers who redistribute devices by those companies. Verizon and AT&T are a defendant in each case. T-Mobile as well as Sprint and its Boost Mobile subsidiary are named as defendants in all cases but the Pantech-related one.

This tactic of separate suits per device maker but with significant overlap among co-defendants is interesting in light of the America Invents Act's multi-defendant joinder rule. Each device maker would presumably like to get their lawsuit transferred to the home state of their U.S. subsidiary. But in that case there would be some duplicative discovery effort involving the same carriers in multiple districts.

The sale of those Nokia Siemens Networks patents to Acacia was announced about a week after the BlackBerry company's recent settlement with Nokia. It appears that BlackBerry was not licensed to the Nokia Siemens Networks patents that were subsequently transferred and now asserted against it, or maybe to none at all.

HTC is still embroiled in litigation with Nokia over approximately 50 patents (and countersuing over two patents of its own, with trials taking place in Germany on Thursday and Friday). It will have to sort out licensing issues not only with Nokia itself but also with Acacia.

Acacia is asserting different sets of patents in yesterday's lawsuits. Some were obtained by Nokia Siemens Networks, while others previously belonged to Nokia or Siemens before being assigned to their joint venture. Here's a list of the patents-in-suit and the patent-specific defendants:

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