Showing posts with label ITC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ITC. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 15, 2022

ITC staff sides with Ericsson on claim construction in standard-essential patent case against Apple

Given the IP-savvy audience of this blog, I don't need to stress the pivotal role of claim construction in patent infringement cases. With respect to claim construction, Ericsson is on the winning track against Apple in its standard-essential patent (SEP) case before the United States International Trade Commission (USITC, or just ITC). A document just appeared on the public docket of ITC investigation no. 337-TA-1299 that shows the Office of Unfair Import Investigations (OUII; commonly referred to as "the ITC staff") concurs with Ericsson, and conversely disagrees with Apple, on several disputed claim terms:

https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/22060656-22-06-14-itc-1299-joined-claim-construction-chart-ericsson-apple-itc-staff

Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) David P. Shaw is an experienced patent judge. He's going to form his own opinion. But what the ITC staff says is an indication to everyone--including, but not limited to, the ALJ presiding over an investigation or litigation watchers like me--as to what a neutral third party might reasonably conclude. Therefore, it appears fairly possible that Apple needs to rely on somewhat far-fetched claim constructions in order to avoid infringement findings over those SEPs. Of course, in order to prove a violation, Ericsson also needs to overcome any invalidity contentions, and has to establish the technical prong of the domestic industry requirement (over the economic prong Ericsson and Apple have agreed not to challenge each other). The technical prong of the domestic industry requirement is, however, rather unlikely to represent a problem for Ericsson in a case over cellular SEPs.

We're far from a final decision, but it is meaningful progress at this procedural stage. Were this a sports event, you'd see the betting odds being adjusted in Ericsson's favor--not massively, but quite significantly.

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Wednesday, April 6, 2022

In ITC filing, Apple turns antitrust concept of 'tying' on its head (once again): Ericsson actually offers standard-essential patent license separately from non-SEP license

Maybe Apple believes that the US International Trade Commission (USITC, or just ITC)and its Administrative Law Judges (ALJs) lack antitrust expertise. Whatever the reason or motivation may be, Apple keeps telling the ITC that Ericsson engages in "tying" because it's simply seeking a U.S. import ban over some non-standard-essential patents (non-SEPs) while simultaneously enforcing SEPs (in parallel cases before the ITC and elsewhere).

This the same Apple that keeps denying the very real tying between its app distribution monopoly and the app tax it imposes on developers. The district judge sided with Apple on that one, but by now I've identified some fundamental misconceptions on her part in connection with market definition. The appeals court will probably disagree with her at least in part, and possibly (even hopefully) overrule her on tying, a context in which the DOJ is supporting Epic (starting with the part that even something that isn't sold or licensed separately can constitute a market).

So, the same Apple that would like to narrow the scope of tying in the App Store context to an extent that has the DOJ concerned--and that will certainly dispute any allegations of tying in connection with its future iPhone subscription service--is telling the ITC a tying story that turns antitrust law on its head.

Let's look at what Apple says, and let's then compare it to what tying actually means. To quote what Vice President Harris said in Munich: "I mean, listen, guys..."

By now, Apple and Ericsson have responded to each other's ITC complaints. Ericsson brought three complaints (one over SEPs, two over non-SEPs), while Apple retaliated with one non-SEP (mmWave) complaint. Apple's response to Ericsson's SEP complaint is sealed for the time being, as is Ericsson's response to Apple's countercomplaint. But Apple's responses to Ericsson's two non-SEP complaints are now publicly available. I've uploaded them to Scribd (337-TA-1300, 337-TA-1301).

Apple already made that "tying" claim in its public interest statements. In its responses to the complaints, Apple raises the issue twice: in connection with the public interest (once again), and as a "patent misuse" theory. Apple claims that "Ericsson is illegally tying the broad SEP portfolio license to the non-essential Asserted Patents." (emphasis added)

Apple says Ericsson is trying to force Apple into a SEP license by enforcing non-SEPs: "Ericsson promised to license its declared SEPs under fair and reasonable terms, and using the threat of injunctive relief in this Investigation to coerce Apple into taking an SEP license is a breach of that agreement."

As a litigation watcher I know what to think of a claim of a breach of an agreement when a party doesn't substantiate it with specific references to one or more relevant terms of that agreement. Apple doesn't do that because it can't. The FRAND pledges of standard-setting organizations like ETSI say nothing about what companies can do with other patents than the ones subject to that pledge. The declared-essential patents are FRAND-encumbered; not entire portfolios involving even non-SEPs.

The contract law claim is devoid of substance. But the antitrust claim is even worse because it's grounded in a theory that portrays tying as the very opposite of what the term really means.

The FTC provides a great explanation of tying:

"For competitive purposes, a monopolist may use forced buying, or 'tie-in' sales, to gain sales in other markets where it is not dominant [...] This may limit consumer choice for buyers wanting to purchase one ("tying") product by forcing them to also buy a second ('tied') product as well. Typically, the 'tied' product may be a less desirable one that the buyer might not purchase unless required to do so, or may prefer to get from a different seller. If the seller offering the tied products has sufficient market power in the 'tying' product, these arrangements can violate the antitrust laws."

Here, Apple claims that Ericsson's non-SEP licenses are the "tying" product and its SEP portfolio license is the "tied" product. In other words, Ericsson allegedly lacks market power in SEPs but does have it by virtue of its non-SEPs, and must use its super-valuable super-powerful non-SEPs to get Apple to take a license to its SEPs...

In reality, market power is a concern related to SEPs, which is addressed by the FRAND commitment.

If there could be any concern about tying, it would have to be the opposite: a SEP holder forcing a company to take a non-SEP license may do so just to inflate the effective royalty rate. I've never seen that happen, though. In FTC v. Qualcomm and Apple v. Qualcomm, it was undisputed that Qualcomm offered a SEP license and a totally optional non-SEP license on top. When Ericsson replied to Apple's public-interest statements, it stated clearly:

"Ericsson offers to license its SEPs without licensing its NEPs."

Theoretically, Apple is free to work around any NEP (non-SEP), whether or not it takes a license to Ericsson's SEPs. At the same time, Ericsson is free not to license its non-SEPs at all, or to offer them only as part of a portfolio license.

Apple's tying-related defenses may be thrown out at an early procedural stage because they make no sense.

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Saturday, March 12, 2022

Ericsson's first U.S. patent trial against Apple to be held in first half of November: ITC evidentiary hearings in other Ericsson v. Apple cases slated for January and February

'Tis the scheduling season for the Ericsson v. Apple 5G patent dispute. Judge Rodney Gilstrap of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas scheduled an Ericsson v. Apple FRAND trial for June 2023, and an Apple v. Ericsson trial for the following month. The Munich I Regional Court will conduct a first hearing in an Ericsson v. Apple case on September 14, 2022, while the Mannheim Regional Court will hold an Apple v. Ericsson trial on October 18, 2022. The Administrative Law Judges (ALJs) in charge of the investigations of Ericsson's three complaints with the United States International Trade Commission ("USITC" or just "ITC") have meanwhile also set some key target dates for their cases, which are theoretically subject to Commission review and practically may get delayed further down the road due to the U.S. trade agency's workload.

The ITC is also investigating Apple's countersuit (over mmWave patents), but should any scheduling decision have been made in that case, it hasn't been published on the agency's electronic docket yet (or isn't publicly accessible yet). I will report on the schedule of that investigation as soon as I find out.

By coincidence, the last-filed one of Ericsson's three near-simultaneous complaints got the fastest schedule. Here's a table that shows you the key dates in those three Ericsson v. Apple cases as currently contemplated by the ALJs:

 337-TA-1299337-TA-1300337-TA-1301
ALJShawMcNamaraElliot
Markman hearingTBD07/11/22 or 07/13/2205/24/22 - 05/25/22
Trial02/01/23 - 02/06/2301/05/23 - 01/12/2311/04/22 - 11/10/22
ALJ ruling05/24/2304/24/2302/24/23
Commission ruling09/25/2308/24/2306/26/23

The Office of Unfair Import Investigations ("OUII" or "ITC staff") will be a neutral participant in all Ericsson-Apple investigations (including Apple's countersuit), but in three of the four cases--all but Ericsson's first-filed case involving standard-essential patents (SEPs)--its participation will be limited to questions concerning remedies without addressing the technical merits.

On this occasion, let me provide, just for convenience, an overview of Ericsson's U.S. patents-in-suit by case.

337-TA-1299 (4G/5G SEP case; ALJ David P. Shaw)

In the Matter of Certain Mobile Telephones, Tablet Computers With Cellular Connectivity, and Smart Watches With Cellular Connectivity, Components Thereof, and Products Containing Same

(Complaint No. 337-3595)

Federal companion lawsuit: Western District of Texas, case no. 22-cv-00060

  1. U.S. Patent No. 8,102,805 on "HARQ [Hybrid Automatic Repeat reQuest] in spatial mutiplexing MIMO [multiple-input multiple-output] system"

  2. U.S. Patent No. 9,532,355 on "transmission of system information on a downlink shared channel"

  3. U.S. Patent No. 10,425,817 on a "subscription concealed identifier"

  4. U.S. Patent No. 11,139,872 on "codebook subset restriction signaling"

337-TA-1300 (first non-SEP case; ALJ MaryJoan McNamara)

In the Matter of Certain Mobile Phones, Tablet Computers, Smart Watches, Smart Speakers, and Digital Media Players, and Products Containing Same

(Complaint No. 337-3596)

Federal companion lawsuit: Western District of Texas, case no. 22-cv-00061 (also includes patents from -1301 investigation)

  1. U.S. Patent No. 7,151,430 on a "method of and inductor layout for reduced VCO [voltage-controlled oscillator] coupling": Ericsson positions this one as "the one patent to ban them all" as it's the only patent allegedly infringed by "at least Apple iPhone mobile phones, Apple iPad tablet computers, Apple Watch smart watches, Apple HomePod smart speakers, and Apple TV digital media players, and products containing same." By contrast, the other patents asserted by the same ITC complaint are described as being infringed by iPhones (though Ericsson reserves the right to amend its infringement contentions).

    The '430 patent is sort of Ericsson's favorite patent-in-suit. It was asserted in 2015 against Apple (in federal court), and last year in an ITC complaint against Samsung. Those disputes settled before any infringement or (in)validity determination was made, but it looks like Ericsson was underwhelmed by both Apple's and Samsung's arguments relating to this patent.

    Furthermore, Ericsson asserted some European members of the same patent family (EP1721324 and EP2819131) against Samsung in Germany and Belgium, and against Wiko in Germany. Samsung and Wiko challenged those patents in the Federal Patent Court of Germany, so Ericsson knows pretty well what kinds of invalidity contentions it has to expect (unless, of course, Apple comes up with different prior art).

  2. U.S. Patent No. 7,957,770 on a "mobile communication terminal for providing tactile interface"

  3. U.S. Patent No. 9,509,273 on "transformer filter arrangement"

  4. U.S. Patent No. 9,705,400 on "reconfigurable output stage"

  5. U.S. Patent No. 9,853,621 on "transformer filter arrangement" (yes, same title as the '273 patent)

337-TA-1301 (second non-SEP case); ALJ Cameron Elliot

In the Matter of Certain Mobile Phones and Tablet Computers, All With Switchable Connectivity

(Complaint No. 337-3597)

Federal companion lawsuit: Western District of Texas, case no. 22-cv-00061 (also includes patents from -1300 investigation)

  1. U.S. Patent No. 8,792,454 on "secure and seamless WAN-LAN [wide area network, local area network] roaming"

  2. U.S. Patent No. 10,880,794 on "inter-band handover of the same physical frequency"

  3. U.S. Patent No. 8,472,999 on a "method and system for enabling dual standby state in a wireless communication system"

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Friday, February 18, 2022

Texas court schedules Apple v. Ericsson (FRAND countersuit) trial for July 2023; USITC institutes investigations of three Ericsson v. Apple complaints, delegates public interest

A couple of days ago, it became known that Judge Rodney Gilstrap scheduled an Ericsson v. Apple FRAND trial in the Eastern District of Texas for June 2023. That scheduling order did not make it seem too likely that Ericsson's case would be dismissed for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction despite Apple's motion. Apple's procedural proposal was to firstly hold a case management conference--and Apple also had a more ambitious schedule in mind.

The next day, Apple filed two sur-replies: one in opposition to Ericsson's motion to dismiss Apple's later-filed FRAND case (possibly because Apple interpreted the scheduling order in a similar way as I did and was looking for ways to keep its motion to dismiss alive), and one opposing Ericsson's motion to amend its October 2021 FRAND complaint with additional claims relating to Apple's conduct (the original ones were just about Ericsson's own behavior). The issues raised in those sur-replies are interdependent as Apple's argument against Ericsson's proposed amendment to its original complaint would moot Apple's original motion to dismiss, while Apple's argument against Ericsson's proposed amendment is that you can't amend a complaint over which the court lacked jurisdiction to begin with, but if Ericsson's earlier-filed case stays alive, Apple has to bring its FRAND claims as counterclaims to that one.

I have not yet found a public redacted version of one of the sur-replies, but I have uploaded (to Scribd) Apple's sur-reply in opposition to Ericsson's motion to file a first amended complaint. That sur-reply is an attempt to broaden the range of circumstances under which a court denies an amendment to a complaint.

On Thursday, Judge Gilstrap also entered a routine scheduling order in Apple v. Ericsson (FRAND countersuit) according to which that trial would start on July 10, i.e., shortly after the Ericsson v. Apple trial, which starts in early June, would presumably conclude (this post continues below the document):

22-02-17 Scheduling Order A... by Florian Mueller

Given that Apple's FRAND complaint was filed about 2.5 months after Ericsson's original case, Apple would get a shorter time-to-trial than Ericsson. But it makes sense given the extent to which the issues in those cases overlap. The question is whether there will be a separate Apple v. Ericsson FRAND trial at all, as its FRAND claims may become counterclaims. There are also declaratory-judgment claims targeting three Ericsson 5G patents in Apple's case, and it's possible that those would then be put before a jury in July 2023. Apple is probably relieved that a scheduling order has also come down in its own case (as opposed to the court firstly evaluating whether that case would go forward at all in the proposed form), but the hurdle for Apple to become the plaintiff in a unified Ericsson-Apple FRAND case is still very high.

There is also some procedural progress in Washington, D.C. at the United States International Trade Commission ("USITC" or just "ITC"). As I expected two days ago, the ITC instituted investigations of Ericsson's three ITC complaints (U.S. import ban requests) against Apple, and I do not have the slightest doubt we'll see an investigation of Apple's countercomplaint instituted any moment now, too.

Ericsson's standard-essential patent (SEP) complaint (no. 337-3595) has been assigned investigation number 337-TA-1299 (PDF); non-SEP complaints nos. 337-3596 and 337-3597 have been assigned investigation numbers 337-TA-1300 (PDF) and 337-TA-1301 (PDF).

The SEP case (337-TA-1299) has been assigned to Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) David P. Shaw. I vaguely remember how he joined the ITC as a "newbie" in 2011; by now he has a great deal of experience in patent law. The first of the two non-SEP cases (337-TA-1300) has been assigned to ALJ MaryJoan McNamara, who like ALJ Shaw has a social-security background, and was appointed four years after him. No assignment of the third Ericsson case (second non-SEP case) has happened yet.

In all three of these cases, the Commission (the U.S. trade agency's top-level decision-making body) has elected to delegate the building of a factual record on any statutory public-interest issues to the ALJs (who will then also write a recommendation on the extent to which the public interest weighs against an exclusion order; the actual decisions are still made by the Commission itself). According to official ITC statistics, the Commission delegated the public-interest record-building part to ALJs in about 16% of investigations that started last year. However, it hardly ever changes anything about the outcome. Unless I missed something, it's been several decades since the Commission itself decided against an import ban for public-interest reasons. The factual record developed by the ALJs is, however, also available to the United States Trade Representative (USTR), to whom U.S. presidents typically delegate their Presidential veto power over ITC exclusion orders. Apple had the benefit of a Presidential veto in 2013 when Samsung won an ITC ruling over a SEP.

I venture to guess the Commission will also delegate the public-interest part to the ALJ who will preside over the investigation of Apple's countercomplaint against Ericsson. Most people in the information and communications technology industry would presumably concur with Ericsson that mobile base stations raise far more serious public-interest issues than smartphones with a view to potential substitutability.

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Thursday, February 3, 2022

Apple's astroturfers try to fool ITC with misleading statement concerning Ericsson's complaint, and Biden Administration and Capitol Hill lawmakers with phony poll: both on the same day

It seems that April Fools' Day has been moved up by two months with respect to standard-essential patent (SEP) policy and Sec. 337 Unfair Import Investigations by the United States International Trade Commission (USITC, or just ITC)...

On February 1, 2022, Apple's notorious astroturfers--dba ACT | The App(le) Association--were out of control again and issued two statements directed at D.C. institutions that no one in Washington should take seriously. However, I am seriously wondering why Apple--the world's richest and most powerful company in history--can't come up with classier and more credible ways of advocating its interests. Sure, Apple is isolated. With three dozen states, the Biden DOJ, and Microsoft supporting Epic Games in the App Store context, it's clear that Apple's ruthless abuse of market power has made the company more enemies than any other company of our times. But simply writing checks to astroturfers is not going to solve the problem.

Apple has to change its practices, and it should take better care of its credibility. Strategically speaking, Apple should ask itself from a long-term perspective whether there is a risk of its reputation as a tyrant in industry circles could erode its popularity with consumers in the long run.

Unless some filings have been made but not surfaced yet, it appears that Apple isn't getting any totally third-party support in the form of public interest statements seeking to dissuade the ITC from a limited exclusion order (colloquially referred to as "import ban") should Apple be found to infringe any valid Ericsson patent(s). The only three statements I've found on the ITC's electronic docket so far were submitted by

The ITC rejected ACT's original submission because that organization used a different font size for its footnotes, which is against ITC guidelines. That's funny, but there's a more fundamental reason for which the ITC should say "thanks, but no thanks" to ACT's grossly misleading submission:

Both ACT's proposed brief and its motion for leave to file a version with a corrected font size fail to tell the ITC the truth about Apple being a financial backer--possibly the largest one, and certainly not the smallest--of that entity.

Instead of telling the ITC the truth, ACT claims that "[t]he [small technology companies] ecosystem the App Association represents is valued at approximately $1.7 trillion and provides 5.9 million American jobs." The reality is that in this context, ACT simply represents Apple, which is valued at closer to $3 trillion.

Quotes often get taken out of context. It's unusual, however, when an organization quotes itself and then misleadingly modifies what it said. ACT's proposed statement on the public interest in connection with Ericsson's SEP-based ITCA complaint 337-TA-3595 references ACT's testimony before the Antitrust Subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee, which--possibly for fear of the consequences of lying to Congress--doesn't claim that the organization represents a $1.7 trillion, 5.9-million-jobs ecosystem:

"The App Association is a trade group representing about 5,000 small to mid-sized software and connected device companies across the globe. In the United States, our member companies are part of a $1.3 trillion industry, supporting about 5.7 million jobs."

They simply have no mandate to speak on behalf of small companies, and even less so when considering that small companies don't appear to pay any membership dues. The organization is funded 100% by large technology companies, first and foremost Apple. ACT has been claiming to have about that number of members for many years, and at some point defined itself as an app developer organization--but in the SEP context increasingly claims to be an IoT industry voice.

ACT's letter (PDF on Scribd) asking the ITC for permission to refile its botched original submission does not mention Apple at all. And the proposed statement on the public interest itself contains the name Apple only once--not with respect to Apple's funding of ACT, but as a reference to a case (Apple v. Motorola) in which the FTC filed an important amicus brief on SEP enforcement. Here's the proposed ACT statement (this post continues below the document with ACT's other February 1 stunt):

22-02-02 ITC-3595 ACT Motio... by Florian Mueller

I believe the ITC should sanction ACT and/or Apple for this omission--and should not give any weight to a brief that also makes no sense because the small app developers ACT claims to represent simply don't implement cellular SEPs themselves (they just write software for devices that do, and then it's the device makers' problem only).

ACT's other February Fools' Day "prank" is a "nationwide poll of registered voters" designed to influence SEP policy-making.

According to the press release (PR Newswire), 71% of "American voters" say "it's extremely / very important for manufacturers to be able to license [SEPs] in a way that is fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory, just 23 percent say it's only somewhat or not too important."

Give me a break. With Apple's money it's probably also possible to pay for a poll that will conclude 71% of "American votes" say "it's extremely / very important for public schools to offer Klingon language courses."

Depending on the degree of fluency required, the number of Klingon speakers may be at a level with the percentage of the wider population that knows what SEPs and FRAND licenses are, and what SEPs and FRAND have to do with "efforts to free up supply chains."

There may even be more support among the electorate for a Donald Duck sculpture on Mount Rushmore than for federal SEP licensing guidelines.

Or look at this insanity:

"More than 60 percent of voters favor the federal government setting clear guidelines on what [FRAND] terms are for [SEPs] (61 percent favor / 32 percent oppose)."

How can 71% of voters have a position on SEP licensing in the supply chain, and 60%+ of voters demand federal guidelines on FRAND licensing of SEPs, when according to ACT | The App[le] Association's own press release "only 10 percent of voters say they know 'a lot' about intellectual property rights?" Even that 10% figure is implausible, but in any event it just doesn't square with those percentages in the high double digits.

There are polls that turn out flawed once one looks into the methodology. Leading questions, selection bias, whatever. But in this case, one doesn't have to dig deeper. The result speaks for itself, as its implausibility and blatant inconsistency should render anyone with a modicum of common sense speechless.

ACT's positions on App Store antitrust issues are even crazier, welcoming Apple's first-round victory over Apple when you can now see that three dozen U.S. states tell the Ninth Circuit that Apple is stifling innovation and harming app developers. But I wanted to focus just on patents here. ACT also makes submissions to the EU institutions all the time, such as in connection with the upcoming revision of horizontal agreement guidelines, and I may write about that topic in the coming weeks or months.

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Friday, July 19, 2019

Patent enforcement against delivery of non-executable data: Federal Circuit more balanced than Germany's Federal Court of Justice

The Munich-based CIPLITEC (Center for Intellectual Property Law, Information and Technology) is a recently-created forum for an exchange of views between the leading Bavarian law schools and practitioners. Yesterday, Dr. Ralf Uhrich, in-house patent litigation counsel at Google and in charge of all European patent infringement cases to which Google is a party (always as a defendant unless I missed something), gave a talk at Ludwig Maximilian University, as per CIPLITEC's invitation, on the subject of "patent protection for data." I had previously seen Dr. Uhrich at various German patent trials while he was a Quinn Emanuel associate, and at a couple of conferences in the area.

As a result of CIPLITEC's inclusive approach, there were 200 or 300 people in the audience as per my estimate; most of them were students, but I also spotted a number of law professors, patent attorneys, and patent litigators. In response to strong demand, this event had to be moved to a larger room than the one they had originally reserved. I attribute this to the topic, to many people's interest in Google's views (though one of the organizers stressed that Dr. Uhrich was expressing his personal views as opposed to engaging in advocacy on his company's behalf), and to Dr. Uhrich's great personal reputation in the German legal community. By the way, if you didn't know who he is, you might be led to believe he's the younger and smarter brother of Liverpool FC manager (and this year's UEFA Champions League-winning coach) Juergen Klopp.

The starting point for the presentation was the European legal framework for patent-eligible subject matter: Article 52 of the European Patent Convention (EPC). As Dr. Uhrich explained, the exclusions set forth there appear broader than they are applied when it comes to entire patents: a token reference to a computer or even just a storage medium salvages a claim, but non-technical claim limitations (though a more efficient use of computing resources is considered technical) are irrelevant to a novelty or inventiveness analysis. Having campaigned against software patents in the EU, my personal view is that the European Patent Office as well as national courts act as if Art. 52 EPC didn't exist as far as entire patent claims are concerned, and while the situation is indeed substantially better with respect to what counts in a novelty or inventiveness context, the statutory exclusions have simply been gutted. A 1969 decision by the Federal Court of Justice of Germany, Rote Taube ("Red Dove"), defined technicity as the planned use of controllable forces of nature for the purpose of achieving a specific result, and on that basis it would be possible to distinguish a software-controlled braking mechanism or other advanced in an applied natural science from pure advances in software such as more efficient memory (or bandwidth) usage through data compression.

The good news in the early part of Dr. Uhrich's presentation was that even the EPO doesn't grant patents that claim a data structure per se. So the issue here is not one of patentable subject matter in the strictest sense, but of the scope given to patent claims at the enforcement stage. To share the bad news upfront, the effect of an overreaching infringement theory can be just as bad as straightforward patent claims on data formats. But, at least for now, the related case law in the United States is fundamentally better than in Germany, though this may be attributable in no small part to the historic happenstance of what cases were put before the courts in what sequence--and what questions for review the parties raised.

Just so there is no misunderstanding: Dr. Uhrich's academic talk was nonjudgmental, so when you find words like "good news" and "bad news" here, rest assured they're just my opinion. He may or may not agree depending on context.

The enforcement-related main part of Dr. Uhrich's talk started with a 19th-century holding by the German Reichsgericht (Imperial Court), Methylenblau, involving a patent covering a chemical manufacturing process that was employed outside of Germany, but the resulting product entered the German market. The key doctrine there was that the scope of protection of a manufacturing patent potentially extends to the output if the substance so produced is an integral part of the patented process. On that basis, the Reichsgericht remanded the matter to the trial court.

The legal tradition that started with Methylenblau wouldn't have had to inevitably lead to a high-court decision, more than a century later, that data sequences generated by a patented data processing operation are afforded the same degree of protection (potentially, as it's always subject to the specific facts of a case). Not only is there a fundamental difference between physical goods and non-physical data but what makes this doubly unreasonable is the blatant inconsistency of such an outcome with the statutory exclusion of patents on "computer programs as such." Unfortunately, it nevertheless happened.

In 2012, the Bundesgerichtshof (Federal Court of Justice of Germany) handed down a decision on whether data storage media manufactured outside of, but imported into, Germany might infringe a video encoding patent, EP0630157 on "systems and methods for coding alternate fields of interlaced video sequences," a patent declared essential to the MPEG 2 video standard. While the patent holder lost the case due to a combination of other reasons, particularly patent exhaustion (the video data was generated with a licensed tool), the decision held that the case could not be dismissed on the grounds of the accused products containing data sequences as opposed to an encoder (be it a physical device or a piece of software).

I have read the MPEG-2-Videosignalcodierung (MPEG 2 video signal encoding) decision, and there is no reference in it to the statutory exclusion of patentable subject matter under the EPC, suggesting very strongly that counsel for defendant didn't raise this point with the top court. German patent litigators rarely recur to the Article 52 exclusions as they have been rendered as meaningless as I explained above when it comes to entire patent claims. Many of my allies in the movement opposing software patents suspect that patent litigators wouldn't even want Article 52 to be given meaning since it would discourage the filing of many patent applications and infringement cases in the first place. Whatever the reason may be, I had a conversation in 2014 with a Federal Court of Justice patent judge (who was on the panel of five judges who made the MPEG 2 decision, though one never knows where a member of a German panel actually stood since there is no such thing in Germany as a dissenting opinion), and I mentioned my opposition to software patents. He noted that their decisions are often misunderstood as being exceedingly permissive in this regard just because the questions put before them--which may just be about novelty or inventiveness, for instance--don't even enable them to address subject matter. I'm still grateful for a very interesting conversation on a train ride from Bayreuth to Nuremberg after a conference, so I don't want to criticize the Federal Court of Justice for a decision that I regard as inconsistent with the letter and the spirit of Article 52 EPC. However, I would strongly encourage other litigants (knowing how many litigators read this blog) to raise the Article 52 question when the opportunity arises in connection with patent enforcement against pure byte sequences.

One of the reasons for which I believe it would be worth trying is that, as Google's Dr. Uhrich explained yesterday, the Federal Court of Justice seized the opportunity afforded to it by a non-digital patent case, Rezeptortyrosinkinase II, to clarify (well, there's a floating border in case law between clarifications and corrections) that the MPEG 2 doctrine doesn't cover just any information resulting from a patented process. In that case decided in 2016, the Federal Court of Justice did not see a patent infringement in the mere communication of the result of a medical analysis from the country in which the analysis is performed to the country in which the process is protected by a patent. In that case, the result was basically just a binary yes-or-no piece of information on whether a certain medical condition was present.

The relevant line-drawing is centered around the question of whether the transmitted data bears actual and technical characteristics engraved by the patented process. In the case of MPEG 2 video data, that was deemed to be potentially the case as the encoding process results in a particular data structure. Apart from the general concerns I raised above, I do have an MPEG-2-specific concern, which is that the key characteristic of MPEG 2 is "lossy" compression, so at least to the extent that data is removed (so as to allow for more efficient compression), it's hard to see how it can simultaneously be "engraved." However, despite disagreeing with the MPEG 2 doctrine, I certainly see the difference between a specific data format on the one hand and some abstract information on the other hand.

However, it will take more decisions to get a better idea of where exactly the line is drawn (and ideally one of the cases would eliminate the problem on the basis of Article 52 EPC). In the Q&A part, I brought up a case I had watched in Mannheim earlier this decade. A cellular standard-essential patent covered an algorithm for calculating a number sequence used as a key (like a cryptographic key) for mathematical operations that transformed data (the data to be sent over the wireless network) in a way that minimized undesirable physical effects at the radio frequency level. The key was clearly standard-essential, just like a cryptographic key prescribed by a security standard would be; but the asserted patent claim, in the preliminary opinion of the panel of judges, probably wasn't because the accused baseband chipsets simply had the number sequence hardwired instead of performing the patented process to derive them. That case was somewhere in the middle between MPEG 2 and Rezeptortyrosinkinase II, but never reached the higher courts due to a settlement.

Thankfully, Dr. Uhrich also drew a comparison between German and U.S. case law on patent enforcement against data sequences. In Bayer v. Housey Pharmaceuticals (2003), the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit affirmed the dismissal of an infringement claim because "infringement under 35 U.S.C. § 271(g) is limited to physical goods that were manufactured and does not include information generated by a patented process, and because the physical goods here (drug products) were not 'manufactured' by a process claimed in the asserted patents." The opinion was authored by Circuit Judge Timothy Dyk, joined by then-Chief Judge Mayer and now-Chief Judge Prost.

The term "manufacture" plays a key role in U.S. patent law. As some of you may remember, it was key to the Samsung v. Apple Supreme Court appeal related to the "article of manufacture" based on which a design patent holder would be entitled to an unapportioned disgorgement of an infringer's profits. The term "manufacture" alone, coupled with an almost-originalist interpretative standard that takes into account what lawmakers really meant way back when, enabled the Federal Circuit to decide against what would have been a similarly expansive school of thought as the one of the Federal Court of Justice of Germany.

Here comes Judge Sharon Prost again, who in most contexts (with exceptions like design patent damages proving the rule) takes very balanced positions. Meanwhile she had become Chief Judge, and she authored the Federal Circuit opinion in ClearCorrect v. ITC, a decision that Google's Dr. Uhrich also explained yesterday. In that case, the ITC had ordered an import ban on data generated outside the U.S. but sent to the U.S. for the purpose of 3D printing. It's not unheard of for the ITC to have an expansive view of its jurisdiction, even including digital data transfers, but the appeals court made clear that it disagreed with what the ITC had already held prior to ClearCorrect, which was that the statutory term "articles" "should be construed to include electronic transmission of digital data [...]."

The way things work, there's no doubt that some patent-asserting plaintiffs are still going to try to push the envelope of data format patentability in the United States. But at least for now, they'll be facing an uphill battle whenever they try.

What is clearly needed is a pushback against overreaching patent enforcement in Germany. Yesterday's academic presentation was neither a campaign speech nor particularly alarmist. Expressing a personal--not corporate--view, Dr. Uhrich responded to a question from the audience with a reference to other forms of intellectual property protection for data, such as database rights (a big thing in the EU, by the way) and copyright law.

I mentioned my Art. 52 EPC concern, but I also think that regardless of software patent-eligibility, the MPEG 2 decision is bad as a matter of policy because if an encoder is patentable, then so is, typically, the related decoder. And that's what the enforcement of codec patents should be limited to.

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Thursday, May 2, 2019

Qualcomm effectively granted Apple a late-payment discount worth billions of dollars: earnings forecast mentions one-time payment

After Apple, its contract manufacturers and Qualcomm settled their antitrust and contradict dispute at the beginning of a trial in San Diego (Southern District of California) two weeks ago, both parties declined to disclose any financial terms. Apparently Apple obtained a direct patent license from Qualcomm, and will use 5G modem chips from Qualcomm in some future iPhone models, and it became known that Apple would make a one-time payment to Qualcomm under the new agreement. On a conference call, Qualcomm CEO Steve Mollenkopf only said this (see a transcript published by CNBC) when asked about the financials of the deal: "Well, a deal like this, there’s a lot of value back and forth, and it's just best to keep it confidential."

The public version of the parties' motion to terminate a pending ITC investigation wasn't exceedingly informative either (this post continues below the document):

Apple-Qualcomm Motion to Te... by on Scribd

Despite the parties' efforts to keep the terms of the deal confidential, the impact on Qualcomm's financials is more than big enough that the patent licensing and chipset company had to say something in its earnings report for its second fiscal quarter of 2019, which also contains guidance on the third quarter and beyond:

"On April 16, 2019, we entered into settlement agreements with Apple and its contract manufacturers to dismiss all outstanding litigation between the parties. We also entered into a six-year global patent license agreement with Apple, effective as of April 1, 2019, which includes an option for Apple to extend for an additional two years, and a multi-year chipset supply agreement with Apple. While we continue to assess the accounting impacts of the agreements, our financial guidance for the third quarter of fiscal 2019 includes estimated revenues of $4.5 billion to $4.7 billion resulting from the settlement (which will be excluded from our Non-GAAP results), consisting of a payment from Apple and the release of our obligations to pay or refund Apple and the contract manufacturers certain customer-related liabilities. In addition, our financial guidance for the third quarter of fiscal 2019 includes estimated QTL revenues for royalties due from Apple and its contract manufacturers for sales made in the June 2019 quarter. Our financial guidance for the third quarter of fiscal 2019 also includes $150 million of QTL revenues from Huawei, which represents a minimum, non-refundable amount for royalties due by Huawei while negotiations continue. This payment does not reflect the full amount of royalties due under the underlying license agreement."

So we know now that the one-time payment is in the range from $4.5 billion to $4.7 billion. Let's compare this to the economically most important ones of the parties' positions in the just-settled San Diego case:

Instead of interest (or: interest on interest) on top of the $7 billion or more in previously-unpaid patent royalties, Qualcomm apparently had to discount its claim by several billion dollars in order to reach an agreement with Apple. The $4.5 billion to $4.7 billion amount of Apple's one-time payment is clearly a lot less than the royalties Qualcomm would have received if Apple, through its contract manufacturers, had made payments in accordance with the earlier agreement. In fact, just the "clawback" of de facto rebates would have amounted to roughly $2 billion, and if you add the "late payment charge" of $1.3 billion, then those secondary charges are almost at a level with the total amount of Apple's one-time payment.

What we don't know, of course, is whether Apple in exchange made some concessions with respect to ongoing royalties. And, of course, the hypothetical worst-case outcome of the San Diego litigation could even have resulted in a payment going north (from Qualcomm in San Diego to Apple in Cupertino).

The passage I quoted further above also mentions Huawei and the fact that there is only a short-term, provisional agreement in place between Huawei and Qualcomm. While Qualcomm is now optimistic that it's in a better position (after settling with Apple last month, and let's not forget they also signed a new agreement with Samsung last year) to work things out with Huawei, time will tell what's going to happen on that front. Huawei, with its HiSilicon chipset division, is in a very strong position vis-à-vis Qualcomm. And its U.S. revenues are practically zero now, so it's hard to see where Qualcomm could get any legal leverage over Huawei.

Here's a passage from Qualcomm's fine-print warnings concerning its forecasts:

"attacks on our licensing business model, including current and future legal proceedings and governmental investigations and proceedings, including potential adverse outcomes relating to the Federal Trade Commission lawsuit against us, and actions of quasi-governmental bodies and standards and industry organizations; potential changes in our patent licensing practices, whether due to governmental investigations, private legal proceedings challenging those practices, or otherwise; the difficulties in enforcing and protecting our intellectual property rights"

The FTC antitrust case in San Jose (Northern District of California) is still pending, and there hasn't been any motion to stay the case. Judge Lucy H. Koh may issue a ruling anytime now. She had already said at the end of the January trial that "this opinion [was] gonna take some time," and given the complexity, magnitude and profile of the case, that's understandable.

It's very hard (way harder than "bench reading") to infer much from the amount of time it takes a court to make a decision, but the passage of time does suggest to me that Judge Koh hasn't identified any quick "get out of jail free" card in Qualcomm's favor. As I noted in my commentary on the trial, Qualcomm basically dug itself in behind a last line of defense, claiming that the FTC hadn't proven actual anticompetitive harm (i.e., consumer harm resulting from its business-to-business practices), and that there were "procompetitive justifications." I think the allegedly "procompetitive" part is easy for the court to dismiss, but in order to get there, and to address actual anticompetitive harm (whatever the outcome may be on the different claims), the ruling has to address everything else.

In my opinion, the FTC is doing the right thing by giving Judge Koh the time she needs to rule on the case. They can still settle with Qualcomm after that decision, which will provide important guidance on a number of questions.

The Apple-Qualcomm dispute, too, involved some interesting legal questions. Fortunately, the Munich Higher Regional Court still seized its chance before the settlement to overturn (by ordering a stay, but based on the prediction that Apple's appeal would have been highly likely to succeed) a Germany-wide patent injunction that had come down without actually establishing an infringement. And now I hope there will be a chance for Judge Koh to adjudicate some key antitrust questions before the FTC settles with Qualcomm--and it appears we are still going to see that opinion.

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Thursday, April 4, 2019

After recent San Diego jury verdict, Apple and Qualcomm disagree on scope and procedural basis of judgment

Apart from PR, the mid-March verdict that a San Diego jury rendered in Qualcomm's favor over three patents isn't overly useful to Qualcomm in its own right as the damages award of §31 million is insignificant compared to what's really at stake between the patent-leveraging chipmaker and Apple (with the big showdown scheduled for April 15). It's just a companion case over a complaint mirroring a request for a U.S. import ban that went nowhere in the ITC--though Qualcomm can, of course, appeal the ITC decision to the Federal Circuit and is taking the unusual previous step to ask the U.S. trade agency to reconsider its patent invalidity finding.

On March 26, Judge Dana M. Sabraw of the United States District Court for the Southern District of California requested briefing on whether a Rule 54(b) judgment--final (thus appealable), but with respect to a subset of the claims in the case--should be entered or not. Apple's motion for judgment as a matter of law (JMOL) is pending anyway, but the court could rule on it in the short term so as to conclude the part involving Qualcomm's offensive claims at the earliest opportunity, or it could await the outcome of the second trial (scheduled for mid July), where Apple's offensive counterclaims (i.e., Apple alleging that Qualcomm infringes some of its patents) will be put before another jury.

Neither party favors Rule 54(b), but for disparate reasons. Qualcomm's position is that the court should sever Apple's offensive claims and enter a final judgment. In terms of appealability and enforceability, I can't see what different it would make, so I believe Qualcomm just feels the court has more discretion to sever the remainder of the case (as it already decided to bifurcate the case). For Qualcomm, Rule 54(b) is at least the second-best choice, while Apple proposes to wait until its own offensive claims have been tried.

The statute requires a determination by the court "that there is no just reason for delay," and Ninth Circuit case law requires a "pressing reason" for a Rule 54(b) judgment.

Even though Apple may have brought its offensive claims relatively late (about six months after Qualcomm's original complaint), I think Apple was disadvantaged by bifurcation. The whole Apple-Qualcomm dispute was never about Apple seeking money from Qualcomm, but the other way round. Therefore, Apple's offensive counterclaims were actually a defensive measure: I'm convinced they just wanted to have a more symmetrical situation in front of the jury. It's not just that the trial would have been more balanced in terms of Apple also accusing Qualcomm of some infringements, but Qualcomm's lawyers would have had to make some of the same defensive arguments that Apple had to make. Also, Apple could have played the game that Samsung played in the 2014 trial of the second Apple v. Samsung case in the Northern District of California, where Samsung sought a relatively modest amount of damages, which may very well have influenced the jury's perspective (indeed, the jury's damages award ended up being only about 5% of what Apple was seeking).

I can think of only one high-profile case where a party with a defensive motivation didn't benefit from its offensive counterclaims: the first Apple v. Samsung trial in the Northern District of California. In that case, Apple asserted a mix of some non-technical, purely visual intellectual property rights (design patents, trade dress) and software patents covering visual, even iconic features, while Samsung counterclaimed over rather technical (partly standard-essential) patents that are harder for a jury to figure out (and was rather aggressive on damages). But in that Qualcomm v. Apple case in San Diego, both parties' patents-in-suit would have been similarly technical in nature, so there would have been a very high degree of symmetry.

With respect to Apple and Qualcomm's disagreement on what type of judgment should come down now and on what basis, it's unsurprising that Qualcomm wants a San Diego judgment on those three patent assertions at the earliest opportunity, given that two of those three assertions overlap with two of the three patents at issue in the ITC case (in either case, Qualcomm asserted the same six, but withdrew three per case, with two in each case overlapping). The overlap between the San Diego case and the ITC investigation, however, is not mentioned at all in Qualcomm's filing, and Apple refers to it in only a footnote:

"In the parallel ITC investigation, the ITC issued a Final Determination finding the single asserted claim of the '490 patent invalid. Qualcomm has publicly stated that it 'will seek reconsideration by [the] Commission in view of the jury verdict' here, which it claims is 'inconsistent.' ALJ Rules in Favor of Qualcomm in Patent Infringement Case Against Apple at the U.S. International Trade Commission, Mar. 26, 2019, available at https://www.qualcomm.com/news/releases/2019/03/26/alj-rules-favor-qualcomm-patent-infringement-case-against-apple-us. Of course, there is no inconsistency between the Commission's invalidity determination and the jury's verdict, which did not even consider validity for the '490 patent. Even so, adhering to the normal policy of entering judgment in this case only after all claims are resolved may help deter Qualcomm from attempting to leverage a partial final judgment to improperly attack the ITC's Final Determination."

But the ITC-San Diego overlap is a fairly important part of what this is about. San Diego is just a PR thing and potential consolation prize for Qualcomm (and it remains to be seen what will happen at the JMOL stage). The ITC exclusion order (U.S. import ban) is what Qualcomm really wanted, and the motion for reconsideration will most likely be denied by the ITC, so Qualcomm needs a successful appeal to the Federal Circuit.

Time is not on Qualcomm's side in another regard: Apple has been quite successful petitioning the Patent Trial & Appeal Board (PTAB) of the United States Patent & Trademark Office (USPTO) for the institution of inter partes reviews of various Qualcomm patents-in-suit. That fact is also why I believe Apple elected not to pursue its invalidity arguments (other than inventorship in connection with the '949 patent) in San Diego at some point: "[M]idway through trial, Apple announced that it had elected not to pursue any art-based invalidity defenses." Juries rarely invalidate patents, so Apple presumably determined it made more sense to have the PTAB rule on (in)validity. That will take time, but the longer things take (including a potential delay resulting from a final judgment having to wait until after the trial of Apple's offensive counterclaims), the more likely Apple is to get some favorable PTAB decisions that will bolster its appeal.

Toward the end of its Rule 54(b) briefing, Apple points to testimony by Qualcomm's own damages expert that may make it quite easy for Judge Sabraw to just hold off on any judgment here: "Both large profitable companies. Really high credit ratings, good balance sheets. Nobody needs cash, right."

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Wednesday, March 27, 2019

Qualcomm wants ITC to reconsider patent invalidity finding because jury decided otherwise after Apple "abandoned" invalidity defense

This is one of the rare cases where company press releases after a judicial decision contain relevant information beyond someone claiming victory, denying defeat, or whatever other form of spin doctoring. After Qualcomm lost its first ITC case against Apple yesterday because the sole remaining patent-in-suit was deemed invalid, Qualcomm issued a press release vowing to seek reconsideration of the ITC determination:

"The Commission's decision is inconsistent with the recent unanimous jury verdict finding infringement of the same patent after Apple abandoned its invalidity defense at the end of trial. We will seek reconsideration by the Commission in view of the jury verdict."

I wrote yesterday that the outcome in the ITC over the same six patents asserted (Qualcomm withdrew three patents in the ITC and in district court before trial, though one patent withdrawn in the ITC stayed in the San Diego case and vice versa) makes the jury verdict lose credibility. Qualcomm turns it around and says the ITC decision is "inconsistent" with the San Diego verdict.

So let's compare the two theories. I must admit I wasn't aware of Apple having "abandoned" the related invalidity defense at the end of the San Diego trial (which I didn't attend), and we'll see whether or not Apple agrees that it did. All things considered, I think anyone who wants to disagree with Qualcomm or me or even both of us at the same time would have a point.

One thing is certain based on the jury verdict form: the San Diego jury didn't render a verdict on quality.

The biggest issues I have with Qualcomm's perspective are these:

  • A layperson jury is definitely not better-placed to decide patent cases correctly than the professionals at the ITC who deal with these things on a daily basis and are legally trained. It is particularly well known that juries rarely ever invalidate patents, and that may be the reason why Apple didn't focus on that invalidity defense in San Diego (also, I see no indication that the motion for judgment as a matter of law--on infringement--was withdrawn in whole or in part).

  • The '490 patent is likely invalid in the opinion of the Patent Trial & Appeal Board (PTAB) of the United States Patent & Trademark Office (USPTO), which instituted five inter partes reviews against this patent in January further to petitions filed by Apple. The legal standard is likelihood of success (wth respect to at least one claim, but since five different petitions were brought against the patent, each petition is pretty granular).

Also, there's really nothing that Qualcomm stands to gain from "reconsideration" by the ITC in practical terms. It's just about vindication and probably meant to be a signal to the appeals court (the Federal Circuit) that Qualcomm hasn't given up. But practically, it will now take some time for the ITC to decide on whether or not to reconsider, and even if the ITC did, it would then take time to make a decision. Apple already has a workaround for the '490 patent in place. If the ITC had decided that Qualcomm was entitled to an import ban (based on the merits, which the ITC didn't see, and on not being against the public interest, a question that the ALJ answered with "no" and the Commission didn't even reach), the only practical question here would have been the length of a grace period so Apple could have sought a determination of non-infringement by devices with newer iOS versions. The more time passes, the less sense it makes to even think and talk about outdated iOS versions. Those older versions are not entering the U.S. market anymore, and presumably stopped entering it months ago. So in practical/commercial terms, it's a waste of time--it's ultimately just about the "principle" of proving infringement. Even the San Diego patent infringement damages award is insignificant relative to the overall dispute between the parties.

That said, I can understand that Qualcomm is disappointed because the ALJ had sided with it on the '490 patent, the ITC staff was also on its side (it defended the ALJ's decision against Apple's petition for review), the outcome was more favorable in the San Diego jury trial, and then the Commission (the six people at the top of the U.S. trade agency) deemed the patent invalid. But in that regard, the Commission ruling is simply consistent with the likely outcome of the inter partes review (otherwise the PTAB wouldn't have instituted those five IPRs in January), and the PTAB is actually the most competent forum on patent validity in the United States.

Should the fact that the PTAB instituted some IPRs against the '490 patent have played a persuasive role here (I would think so!), then that doesn't bode well for Qualcomm's second ITC case against Apple, where a judge ruled yesterday that Apple was deemed to infringe a valid patent, though the ITC staff disagreed on infringement and the PTAB considers the patent likely invalid. I, for my part, very much doubt that the other ITC case would ever result in an import ban. The final Commission decision in that one is scheduled for July 26.

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Tuesday, March 26, 2019

Qualcomm loses first ITC case against Apple, recent San Diego infringement verdict loses credibility

Earlier today, an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) of the United States International Trade Commission (USITC, or just ITC) issued a preliminary ruling in Qualcomm's favor with respect to one of the three remaining patents-in-suit (out of five originally asserted patents) in the investigation of Qualcomm's second ITC complaint against Apple. But that finding is still subject to review.

A final (apart from a possible appeal) Commission decision just came down at 5 PM Eastern Time in the investigation of Qualcomm's first ITC complaint against Apple. A different ALJ, Thomas B. Pender, had identified a violation of one patent (out of six patents originally asserted in that case), but recommended that, even if this finding had been affirmed, no import ban should have issued in light of Qualcomm's anticompetitive intentions (as the complaint targets only Intel-powered iPhones). The final ruling (PDF), however, is that there is no violation.

Apple's petition for a review of the infringement holding had been granted in December, while Qualcomm's petition for review had been denied.

As a result of the ITC finding that the sole remaining patent-in-suit being invalid (in the ITC's opinion, it fails to meet the nonobviousness requirement for patentability), any further public-interest analysis became unnecessary.

In my commentary since the Commission's determination to review the finding of a violation, I had repeatedly noted that any one out of the first eight (of nine) questions raised by the Commission on review had the potential to decide the case in Apple's favor, so from a probabilistic point of view it was relatively likely (though far from certain) that the result would be "no violation." And, in any event, Apple had already worked around that patent.

For Qualcomm, this decision is nevertheless disappointing. As I wrote about the recent jury verdict in San Diego relating to a "companion lawsuit" that mirrored the ITC complaint, that verdict is grossly inconsistent (almost an understatement) with the outcome in the ITC. Post-trial proceedings are ongoing, and Judge Dana M. Sabraw of the United States District Court for the Southern District of California still has to adjudicate Apple's motion(s) for judgment as a matter of law (JMOL). The chances of a JMOL motion have definitely improved with today's ITC decision, simply because Judge Sabraw will take note of the fact that the professionals at the ITC found no violation of the '490 patent (which is one of the patents at issue in the San Diego case). The standard for JMOL is that no reasonable jury could have found otherwise, and an ITC decision doesn't necessarily make a jury verdict unreasonable, but again, it has become more likely than before.

Qualcomm may appeal the ITC decision, and I guess it will, while Apple will appeal the upcoming San Diego judgment unless its JMOL motion succeeds with respect to all patents-in-suit (in which case Qualcomm would appeal). Both appeals will go to the Federal Circuit, and will likely be consolidated there.

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Tuesday, March 12, 2019

Testimony on stolen patent deals huge blow to Qualcomm's San Diego infringement case against Apple

The ongoing Qualcomm v. Apple patent infringement trial in San Diego (Southern District of California) is generally the least interesting part of the earth-spanning dispute between these two companies. As I explained in the blog post I just linked to, it's basically an attempt to get a better outcome in a jury trial than Qualcomm achieved in the ITC, where the most experienced Administrative Law Judge and his six bosses appeared to be underwhelmed by a complaint over the same patents-in-suit as in the San Diego case.

But there is one aspect of that San Diego case that's definitely interesting. It's a perfect example of how truth is sometimes stranger than fiction. If we come from the reasonably safe assumption that Arjuna Sivasithambaresan--who simply abbreviates his last name as "Siva"--testified truthfully under oath in two different fora (ITC and Southern District of California), Qualcomm's '949 patent was filed on an invention a then-Apple employee (now with Google) actually made.

In other words, the most reasonable inference from that testimony is that Qualcomm decided to sue Apple over a patent Qualcomm applied for because it learned about the idea from a then-Apple employee. That story of a robbery attempted with a weapon stolen from the victim would be unbelievable in its own right, and maybe not unprecedented in the history of patent infringement cases (it may or may not be), but certainly rare enough that I hadn't heard anything remotely as outrageous in all those years of monitoring patent lawsuits. Actually, the situation is even more bizarre:

Even though Qualcomm already became aware of this problem in the aforementioned ITC case over the same patents, and decided to drop the '949 patent from the ITC case shortly thereafter (most likely for this very reason), Qualcomm nevertheless decided to give it another try in San Diego. "Unbelievable" is not strong enough a word to describe this. Not even remotely. It's not just that Qualcomm is hardly going to prevail on the '949 patent: a story of a stolen patent undermines a plaintiff's credibility to an extent that's the next best thing to self-sabotaging the entire case.

In her opening statement, Apple's lead counsel in this case, Fish & Richardson's Juanita Brooks, already told the jury what Mr. Siva was going to testify. Based on Apple's experience with him in the ITC as well as based on his deposition in connection with the San Diego case, the assumption apparently (and quite understandably) was that Mr. Siva would tell the San Diego jury the very story he had told (more than once) before.

There was some temporary uncertainty as to whether Mr. Siva would go down to San Diego and testify. In the alternative, Apple would have had to tell the jury that what Mrs. Brooks announced in her opening statement just didn't work out, so the jury would have had to content itself with a videotaped deposition of Mr. Siva. In that context, Apple asked the court for a curative instruction (which is no longer needed since Mr. Siva ultimately did testify in front of the San Diego jury), and raised the issue of potential "witness tampering."

The parties' lawyers disagree on what exactly happened and what the consequences should be. What's certain is that Mr. Siva had been represented by Wilmer Hale, a firm that counts Apple among its clients, earlier on, but just last week he was suddenly represented by San Francisco-based attorney Matt Warren. Mr. Warren is a former Quinn Emanuel partner, and QE is representing Qualcomm in its infringement cases against Apple. What had Apple puzzled was that Mr. Siva--the former Apple engineer now employed by Google--suddenly didn't want to testify voluntarily. One version of the story is that Mr. Warren wanted Apple to subpoena his then-client; Apple's version suggests the problem might have been bigger, and a subpoena would have contracted Apple's opening statement. After Apple's allegation of witness tampering came up, Mr. Siva (the witness) appointed different counsel again, went down to San Diego, and delivered testimony that is pretty damning for Qualcomm's case.

From the outside, it's far from inconceivable that Qualcomm selected the '949 patent for the San Diego trial because its lawyers somehow hoped Mr. Siva wouldn't show up in San Diego and say essentially the same thing as in the ITC: that the claimed invention was his. not Qualcomm's.

But it's impossible to know who made the decision to give the '949 patent another try (after the ITC experience), and on what basis.

That's why Apple's lawyers phrased their suspicion of witness tampering somewhat carefully (according to a filing made today). They steered clear of specifically accusing Qualcomm or Quinn Emanuel. The temporary uncertainty surrounding Mr. Siva's willingness to appear in front of the San Diego jury was, however, strange enough that Judge Sabraw said: "I do understand why Apple is very upset."

Without formally moving for sanctions, Qualcomm's lawyers stated they might seek all sorts of sanctions against Apple and its counsel, including a directed verdict on infringement and validity or the termination of Apple's lead counsel from the case. At this point I doubt anything serious is going to happen. If Mr. Siva had not appeared in San Diego, then there would have been something to fight about. But whether or not there was any uncertainty as to his willingness to come down to San Diego (which Qualcomm's lawyers deny), it's irrelevant to the jury. The jury heard his testimony, and it couldn't have gone worse for Qualcomm.

Here's Apple's latest filing related to this subissue of the wider dispute, and that filing describes the chronology of events (this post continues below the document):

19-03-12 Apple Response to ... by on Scribd

On this occasion I'd also like to show you Apple's motion for judgment as a matter of law, claiming that Qualcomm failed to prove infringement, willfulness, and its damages claims (invalidity is not addressed by that motion because it's Apple's--not Qualcomm's--case to make, and the motion was filed after Qualcomm's case-in-chief, not after Apple's):

19-03-11 Apple Motion for J... by on Scribd

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Tuesday, March 5, 2019

The Qualcomm v. Apple patent jury (selected yesterday in San Diego) won't get these simple, brutally honest instructions

Yesterday (Monday, March 4, 2019) a Qualcomm v. Apple patent infringement trial kicked off in San Diego (Southern District of California). This article by Reuters' Stephen Nellis summarizes what became known on the first trial day. A funny tidbit, reported by MLex's Mike Swift, is that a software engineer wasn't allowed to become a juror after expressing his despise of software patents, which is how the vast majority of software developers simply feel:

Obviously, the jury will get nonjudgmental instructions in accordance with the law from Judge Dana M. Sabraw. But on this blog I can take some liberties, and now I'll tell you the story the way I think it should actually be told to the jury upfront. It's an alternative-universe approach, but actually, it's a lot closer to the facts than any official instructions could ever be.

Dear Jurors,

I'm so sorry for you because you now have to spend about two weeks or more in court, getting less than minimum wage and probably horrible food, and while it's your civic duty, it's actually pointless in this case.

This is about one yuuuge company, Qualcomm, suing another yuuuuuuuge company, Apple, theoretically over tens of millions of dollars, on a basis on which it's pretty much lost another case before. So let me walk you through this dispute chronologically:

Qualcomm's original entrepreneurial story of successfully swimming against the tide with code division multiple access (CDMA) is absolutely admirable. But that was a long time ago, and just like any other company in its position, Qualcomm engaged in rent-seeking: it wanted, and still wants, to get as much as possible, and for as long as possible, out of its great accomplishment of decades ago.

Where lawmakers and courts draw the lines is when a company's rent-seeking efforts turn out to be anticompetitive schemes. In America, we generally believe in market forces. Supply and demand--and may the best product or the most competitively-priced product win. But when a company doesn't compete on a fair basis, antitrust comes into play. Even prior to this decade, competitors and customers alleged that Qualcomm violated the antitrust laws. For a long time, nothing serious happened because everything got settled somehow. Then they got fined in South Korea and China, but what Qualcomm has been facing since the last week of December 2016 is an antitrust nightmare. First the Korea Fair Trade Commission (KFTC) imposed a billion-dollar fine; then our United States Federal Trade Commission (FTC) sued Qualcomm a one-hour flight up north from here in January 2017; and a few months later, the Taiwan Fair Trade Commission and the European Commission followed suit, again with billion-dollar fines (just roughly).

Shortly after the aforementioned FTC complaint was filed in San Jose, and still in January 2017, Apple brought an antitrust and contract lawsuit of its own against Qualcomm. In this patent infringement case, Apple is the defendant (and it has some counterclaims of Qualcomm allegedly infringing Apple patents, but those will only go to trial in July because we didn't want to keep you guys here for too long). But in the antitrust and contract case, Apple is the plaintiff and alleges massive wrongdoing by Qualcomm. Between what Apple and its contract manufacturers (companies like Foxconn that manufacture the iPhone in China) are seeking, Qualcomm might have to pay tens of billions of dollars (though Qualcomm says it should work like that the other way round).

Five months after Apple's lawsuit, Qualcomm started suing Apple for the alleged infringement of six patents. Anyone could easily see that Qualcomm wanted to distract from its antitrust worries, and that Qualcomm sought and is still seeking to portray Apple as a thief of its intellectual property. That's why Qualcomm published an infographic, which we'll talk about--and from today's perspective laugh about--a little later.

Qualcomm asserted the same six patents in two so-called fora: the complaint we're now dealing with here was just a mirror, more commonly called a "companion" complaint. Companion to what? To a complaint with the United States International Trade Commission (ITC). The ITC is sort of a court. Actually, it's a trade agency, but you can ask them to impose an import ban on products that you believe violate your patents. When companies sue, at least when large ones do so, they typically bring a companion complaint in a federal district court like this one here. That's because the ITC can only ban products, but it can't order a defendant to pay the complainant any money. Remember I said the ITC is "sort of a court"? That's why--there are things, such as damage awards, that only so-called Article III courts can do. So if you want everything--an import ban as well as some money--you need two complaints, not just one. An import ban is typically considered the grand prize because it sometimes gives a patent holder great leverage over the other party, while damages are the consolation prize.

The ITC doesn't need, want or have juries. Everything gets decided by professional judges. They're called Administrative Law Judges, or ALJs. Just like you, or most of you, they don't have a technical background, but unlike you, they're legally trained and they do this all the time, so after a while they know patent law inside out and they get a pretty good idea of how to apply the law to technology products. Nobody is perfect, but let's put it this way: there's a lot of things that the average jury struggles to understand that an ALJ simply knows or figures out.

ITC investigations are much faster than the average patent case that is put before a federal jury. In our case, the ALJ already made his so-called initial determination last year. We'll get to his findings in a moment.

Before the ALJ even made his preliminary decision, Qualcomm had already dropped three of the six patents-in-suit. The ITC urges complainants to narrow their case in order to save time, but most of the time a patent gets dropped because it simply isn't likely to be held infringed or valid at the end of the day.

So the ALJ looked at the three remaining patents, and sided with Qualcomm on only one of the three, but not the other two. In fact, the reason you don't have to look at six patents now is because this court here in San Diego found one of them to be so clearly not infringed that there was no point in letting you look at it--which happens rather rarely because normally juries get to decide on all the facts.

Even with respect to the patent the ALJ in Washington, DC deemed valid and infringed, he concluded Qualcomm wasn't entitled to an import ban because it was just trying to cause anticompetitive harm. But that's another story.

The ALJ's decision is called initial determination because it's not final. Technically, nothing is ever final in a judicial proceeding as long as someone can appeal, but an initial determination is particularly non-final because the parties get to petition the Commission, the six people at the top of the ITC, to review any findings adverse to their interests--and the Commission then makes the final determination (which can be appealed to a higher court just like a district court ruling).

Both Apple and Qualcomm filed such petitions. Apple's petition succeeded (to the extent it could at the procedural stage we're talking about), while Qualcomm's failed. This means the ITC's decision is final with respect to two patents (plus Qualcomm had given up on three of them earlier on): Qualcomm asked the ITC to take a look at those failed patents again should Apple be granted a review, and as I just said, Apple's petition was granted, but Qualcomm's contingent petition went nowhere.

The ITC has yet to make a final decision with respect to the last one of those patents--the '490 patent. The ITC raised nine technical questions, every single one of the first eight of which has the potential to make Qualcomm lose the entire case. But even if Qualcomm overcame all those technical hurdles, and even if the Commission disagreed with the ALJ on the question of whether an import ban raises public-interest issues (for competition-related reasons), it wouldn't matter because Apple has already worked around that patent. To work around a patent means that you modify your product so it no longer practices the invention claimed by the patent. It's like you have version 5 of a product that infringed, but then there's a version 6 and it no longer infringes, so the ban doesn't apply to it.

So the whole ITC case has been a major disappointment for Qualcomm. Three patents dropped, two patents not infringed, and the sixth one may or may not be infringed, but it doesn't really matter anymore because of that workaround. I mentioned Qualcomm's infographic earlier on. Let me show it to you, but with some manual corrections that reflect what happened during the course of the ITC proceedings (click on the image to enlarge; this post continues below the document):

Now you know that the case in front of you is just a mirror of another case that failed to impress a professional judge and his six bosses. It will be a total failure if even the sixth patent is thrown out there (Apple would just have to prevail on any one of those first eight technical questions), or alternatively "only" a near-total disaster should there be an import ban over a patent that's no longer relevant to the iPhone because of a change made to iOS.

Yes, the only reason you have to waste time in this windowless courtroom is that Qualcomm wants a second bite at the Apple. It's because Qualcomm decided not to accept what the professionals in Washington, DC determined. Qualcomm could have withdrawn this complaint, either in whole or at least for the most part. But instead, Qualcomm still hopes that you are more impressionable than the ITC and will buy what its high-paid lawyers and witnesses are going to tell you now.

You obviously have every right to form your own opinion regardless of what happened in our nation's capital. Of course, it's theoretically possible that you'll get something right that the ITC got wrong. But if you had to bet money, would you rather bet on eight laypeople or on one professional judge plus his six bosses? The answer is clear. And it's even more obvious that you'd hardly bet money on patents that Qualcomm itself withdrew from that other case. If Qualcomm had prevailed on its final three patents, then maybe the three dropped patents would also have been interesting, but they decided to accelerate the proceedings. However, even the final three patent infringement claims turned out pretty weak, so it's hard to imagine that the three patents Qualcomm itself elected to drop from the ITC case would be particularly strong...

Let's be realistic. Qualcomm just wants to get a headline that Apple infringes at least one of its patents. Compared to the big Apple & Contract Manufacturers v. Qualcomm case going to trial next month, over tens of billions of dollars, this here is too small to be a prelude. It's a sideshow, and even the word "sideshow" sounds a whole lot more important than this case really is.

Lest I forget to tell you, some lawyers filed a lawsuit two years ago against Qualcomm on your behalf. Not specifically yours, but yes, you were most likely included because I guess you bought at least one smartphone in the relevant period (which starts in March 2011). They're trying to get a payout for up to 250 million Americans: an average amount of $20 per person. But whether and when that case will go to trial depends on some other decisions to be made by some other judges in the meantime. What it does show you, though, is that you're looking at a tiny piece of the puzzle. Let me show you a "battlemap" that will give you an idea of all the claims brought against Qualcomm lately, as well as Qualcomm's retaliatory sideshows (click on the image to enlarge; this post continues below the image):

Qualcomm isn't going to solve any of its real problems with the lawsuit before you. No matter what you decide, it won't move the needle--and it won't change a thing about what all those governmental competition watchdogs in the U.S., Europe and Asia are concerned about. But it's your civic duty to listen to the lawyers and the witnesses, and to reach a consensus on a decision. Again, sorry for this. For the five bucks an hour and for the food. Good luck!

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