Showing posts with label Privateering. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Privateering. Show all posts

Monday, February 22, 2021

Sisvel v. Haier II: no patent ambush defense against acquirer of standard-essential patent, Germany's Federal Court of Justice holds

The bad news is already in the headline: if you get sued in Germany over a standard-essential patent (SEP) and the original patent holder engaged in patent ambush (thereby defrauding the standard-setting process), but the party asserting the patent against you now acquired the patent subsequently to standardization, you don't have a patent ambush-based defense in Germany.

The good news--for me personally--is that the Federal Court of Justice of Germany has published a decision that validates something I wrote about two years ago.

In March 2019, Judge Dr. Thomas Kuehnen ("Kühnen" in German) of the Dusseldorf Higher Regional Court ruled on appeal brought by Huawei in the German part of its dispute with Unwired Planet, further to a hearing in which he had already lashed out the practice of privateering (operating companies assigning patents to trolls). In that March 2019 ruling, the Dusseldorf appeals court held that the ND (non-discrimination) part of FRAND precluded the acquirer of a patent from seeking royalties at a rate inconsistent with the licensing practices of a previous owner of that patent. In my commentary, I welcomed the result, but crticized the derivation very harshly as "legislat[ing] from the bench as if patent law were a parallel universe." I said so because Judge Kuehnen's theory involved the notion that the FRAND promise and all that goes with it attached itself to a patent just like "in rem" rights in connection real estate, where a right of way may allow neighbors to lay telephone lines on your property--as opposed to an inter partes agreement, which wouldn't give a future acquirer any rights.

Fast forward by almost two years, and the Federal Court of Justice--which is the highest court in Germany to hear patent infringement and related antitrust cases (unless someone raises a constitutional issue that the Federal Constitutional Court would hear)--has just published a decision it already made on November 24, 2020 in a Sisvel v. Haier case. The first Sisvel v. Haier ruling came down in May 2020, so this is now Sisvel v. Haier II.

Some of the new Sisvel v. Haier II holdings restate, reinforce, and clarify Sisvel v. Haier I. For example the court explains that both parties--SEP holder and implementer--have an obligation to contribute in good faith to the conclusion of a license agreement on FRAND terms, and that they have to do so "in a manner commensurate with the situation."

But there's also a new aspect that gets addressed in Sisvel v. Haier II:

"(c) Outside of the scope of the protection of successors in interest in accordance with Art. 15(3) Patent Act, affirmative defenses that the implementer of an invention was entitled to bring against a prior owner of the patent-in-suit cannot be raised against the patentee's successor. This particularly applies to the affirmative defense of a 'patent ambush.'"

Art. 15(3) Patent Act simply ensures that a licensee remains licensed even if the patent holder transfers the patent.

Statutory law doesn't say that a former patent holder's unclean hands--here, due to ambush tactics during development of the standard--can give rise to an equitable defense against a subsequent owner.

Judge Kuehnen's April 2019 decision wasn't about patent ambush. But it was based on the general notion--which I sharply disagreed with though I liked the case-specific outcome--that certain rights and obligations (beyond just an already-granted license) attach themselves to a patent and survive any number of patent transfers.

The Federal Court of Justice has now clarified that, other than Art. 15(3) Patent Act on licenses surviving patent transfers, the acquirer of a patent is not responsible in any way for what a prior owner of that patent did.

If a given SEP was previously licensed at a lower rate than the one an acquirer is demanding now, that may very well be taken into consideration by a court. The terms of comparable license agreements matter, and if a license deal involves the same patent and a similarly-situated licensee, it may be particularly comparable and, therefore, a court may afford it a lot of weight in the FRAND analysis. Nevertheless, an acquirer of a patent doesn't engage in discriminatory treatment of licensees only because an inconsistency between the terms it is seeking now and the ones on which a prior owner of the same patent granted someone a license.

If an implementer of a standard has a patent ambush defense, it may just have to bring that one as an antitrust damages claim against the original patent owner who participated in the standard-setting process. And if a prior holder of the patent contented itself with substantially lower royalties than its acquirer, that may inform the FRAND analysis, but does not all by itself constitute discrimination.

It's disappointing that the situation described in this post incentivizes privateering. A patent holder may formally "sell" the patent to an acquirer, though actually retaining most of the revenues, and implementers will find it harder to defend themselves against the acquirer than they could have defended themselves against the original owner. That's suboptimal to say the least. Maybe an EU SEP directive or some other piece of legislation could do something about it and could make privateering less profitable. But under the statutory framework as it stands, I can't disagree with the Federal Court of Justice on the availability of a patent ambush defense.

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Monday, September 21, 2020

PanOptis/Unwired Planet patent troll group sues allegedly unwilling licensee Tesla over former Panasonic and Ericsson patents in Eastern District of Texas

There's further escalation in the standards-essential patent (SEP) conflict between the abusive Avanci gang and the 21st century's most innovative automotive company, Tesla:

After Conversant Wireless's patent infringement complaints against Tesla in the Western District of Texas and the Mannheim Regional Court, a request for a Japanese import ban by Sharp, and Sisvel doubled down on its litigation campaign against Tesla in the District of Delaware, the affiliated patent trolls named Optis Wireless, PanOptis, and Unwired Planet have just filed a patent infringement suit against Tesla in the Eastern District of Texas over four former Panasonic patents and one former Ericsson patents, all of them declared to be essential to cellular telecommunications standards (this post continues below the document):

20-09-20 Optis PanOptis Unw... by Florian Mueller

These are the four former Panasonic patents-in-suit:

In addition, the trolls are asserting a former Ericsson patent:

Legal entities from the same patent troll group received a $506 million verdict against Apple last month in the same venue: Marshall, Texas, where the exceeding troll-friendly Chief District Judge Rodney Gilstrap presides over numerous patent infringement cases every year.

The complaint contains a relatively detailed descriptions of efforts by the Avanci patent pool firm as well as the plaintiffs in this action to sell Tesla a license. The trolls' lawyers argue that Tesla behaved like an unwilling licensee, engaging in hold-out rather than good-faith negotiations, sometimes taking many months to respond to an offer in a way that the trolls didn't consider to be constructive. But let's not take that narrative at face value:

  • It remains to be seen how Tesla will seek to justify its negotiation style when it files it answer to the complaint, and when the case gets closer and ultiamtely goes to trial.

  • At the heart of the problem is something you can't blame Tesla for: instead of demanding SEP royalties from Tesla on the value of an entire car, the trolls and their Avanci pool firm should talk to the relevant suppliers about an exhaustive component-level license that would cover the downstream, including but not limited to Tesla.

The day after tomorrow, the Munich I Regional Court will hold a trial over one of various patent infringement cases brought by another privateer (a patent troll fed by a large company with patents for the purpose of extracting higher royalties than otherwise), Conversant Wireless, against Daimler. As I noted in the previous post, the patent-in-suit in that case is now also being asserted against Tesla in a differnet German court (Mannheim). The Munich decision in the Daimler case won't be formally binding on the Mannheim court in any way, but should Daimler lose in Munich, Tesla would have to convince the Mannheim judges that their Munich-based colleagues made a mistake.

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Monday, June 15, 2020

Without transparency in patent ownership, the Avanci pool borders on a scam operation that harms the IoT industry

Avanci isn't the first patent pool to employ a great deal of spin-doctoring, but its homepage is particularly "rich." Take the "Enabling the IoT" headline (that's one of the pages in its "Marketplace" section): baseband chipset makers undoubtedly enable the IoT, as do makers of connectivity modules that contain such chips and additional components, but Avanci refuses to grant them exhaustive patent licenses--which is an impediment (rather than conducive) to the further development and widespread adoption of IoT technologies

No less absurd is the claim that Avanci's pricing (leaving the question of component-level licensing aside for a moment) is fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory (FRAND). Those of us following the Nokia v. Daimler litigation series know that Nokia makes a clearly supra-FRAND royalty demand (several times what Nokia gets per smartphone) and argues that it gets a similar amount as its share of Avanci's royalty income.

By far the most insane claim on Avanci's website is, however, the part where they talk about the "goal of bringing [...] transparency and predictability to the [licensing] process." Give me a break. On that whole damn website there's no such thing as a list of the patents you can license through Avanci. Nor do they publish their licensing terms. By contrast, there are patent pools such as this one (MPEG LA's AVC/H.264 pool) that do both: they publish their license agreements (including the fees), and they provide a patent list. The length of such a list is no excuse: they could upload a PDF that contains them all and/or provide access via a database query interface. Avanci's claim to be transparent is, sadly, an insult to human intelligence. That website is the epitome of intransparency. It couldn't realistically be any less informative.

Abusers like Avanci (and its worst members in that regard) give patent pools a bad name. I'd like to highlight two new academic papers in this context. First, Orrick Herrington &amp, Sutcliffe's John J. "Jay" Jurata and Emily Luken discuss the desirable and (in an increasing number of cases) undesirable effects of standard-essential patent pools in Glory Days: Do the Anticompetitive Risks of Standards-Essential Patent Pools Outweigh Their Procompetitive Benefits? That paper flags some very relevant concerns.

Second, with respect to the specific issue of transparency, three University of Bordeaux researchers just published a paper on Non-practicing entities and transparency in patent ownership in Europe that was funded by a lobbying group whose largest member, Google, neither practiced nor promoted transparency in patent ownership in the early to mid 2010s. They even made threats based on patents they claimed to hold but declined to disclose. Then, Google is nowadays also a member of the Fair Standards Alliance, though its then-subsidiary Motorola Mobility was one of a very few companies ever to be held liable for FRAND abuse (by the United States District Court for the Western District of Washington, affirmed by the Ninth Circuit). In a world in which we usually see the opposite trend (with ever more companies resorting to aggressive patent monetization after losing out in the marketplace), such defectors from the dark side are a welcome exception.

The paper on (the lack of) transparency raises the issue of patents being transferred in the middle of licensing negotiations without notice to a licensee. That's a serious issue, and one that Avanci badly needs to address.

If you negotiate an Avanci license today and sign a contract tomorrow, you may find yourself on the receiving end of litigation involving patents that you thought were part of your Avanci package until you found out that those patents were transferred without you having any way of knowing.

Some of Avanci's most important contributors engage in the ignominious practice of "privateering" (letting trolls assert parts of their portfolios on their behalf, with so-called patent "transfer" agreements often just reducing the patent assertion entity to a service provider and agency while the original patent holder is the main beneficiary in commercial terms).

So far, the victims of privateering were mostly smartphone makers like Apple. But while we're on the subject of the Internet of Things that Avanci falsely pretends to promote, it's worth noting that the IoT sector is increasingly impacted by privateering-style patent infringement suits.

Panasonic--an Avanci contributor--gave a bunch of LTE-related SEPs to a troll named Swirlate IP, which has brought five U.S. patent infringement complaints against the IoT industry over former Panasonic patents that the industry at large might have been led to believe were part of the Avanci pool:

A second Panasonic privateer, Nitetek, is suing ChargePoint in the Northern District of California.

Avanci offers a license to a portfolio of portfolios, but how many of those patents are "phantom patents" that have in reality already been assigned to trolls, which effectively results in double-dipping?

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Tuesday, June 2, 2020

Nokia-fed Avanci-aligned patent troll Conversant asserting two patents against Tesla in Mannheim: same patents in use against Daimler in Munich

It already became known in late April that Conversant Wireless, a patent troll that obtained patents from Nokia a while ago and contributes to the abusive Avanci patent pool, is suing Tesla in the Western District of Texas as well as in Mannheim, Germany. Meanwhile the Mannheim Regional Court's press office has thankfully been able to provide me with details on the two German Conversant v. Tesla cases:

  • The patent-in-suit in case no. 2 O 27/20 is EP2934050 on an "apparatus and method for providing a connection."

  • The patent-in-suit in case no. 2 O 57/20 is EP3300421 on a "slow mac-e for autonomous transmission in high speed uplink packet access (hsupa) along with service specific transmission time control."

Those two patents are among the ones Conversant is asserting agaist Daimler in Munich.

The two German Conversant v. Tesla cases are going to be adjudicated by the Mannheim Regional Court's Second Civil Chamber (Presiding Judge: Dr. Holger Kircher). From a FRAND perspective, the assignment of those cases to that particular division of the court is unfavorable to Tesla, given that the Second Civil Chamber--though it made a key adjustment--interprets the Court of Justice of the EU's Huawei v. ZTE ruling to the effect that an implementer's FRAND counteroffer is analyzed first, irrespectively of the fact that it (chrono)logically comes second and is merely meant to ensure a defendant won't employ unreasonable delaying tactics.

Another Avanci-aligned patent troll, Sisvel, recently stepped up its patent assertion campaign against Tesla.

The steady stream of new standard-essential patent (SEP) assertions against car makers is the result of regulatory authorites such as the European Commission having been indecisive regarding SEP abuse in an automotive context for too long. It's high time something happened in Brussels and/or elsewhere. And it still might.

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Wednesday, May 27, 2020

Nokia-fed Avanci-aligned patent troll Conversant stepped up litigation campaign against Daimler: now four cases pending in Munich

Nokia used to be the pride of Europe in its field, but it failed (as the saying goes, the higher you climb, the harder you fall), and a result, its patents have become not the, but certainly a scourge of Europe.

In October I discovered a German Conversant v. Daimler lawsuit because it was mentioned in a U.S. court filing. Nokia gave Conversant a package of cellular standard-essential patents (SEPs)--a practice commonly referred to as "privateering" that anybody in Brussels trying to dissuade the European Commission from enforcing EU antitrust law against Nokia should be ashamed of.

By now, Conversant has brought at least three more cases in Munich (and maybe others in different fora):

  • The first one I became aware of is over EP2934050 on an "apparatus and method for providing a connection" and was filed on August 13, 2019. The original complaint (case no. 21 O 11384/19) merely sought an accounting of Daimler's sales of infringing products, but Conversant could add--and by now might have added--a request for injunctive relief anytime (the patent is set to expire in early 2021).

    The case will go to trial on September 23, 2020 before the 21st Civil Chamber (Presiding Judge: Tobias Pichlmaier).

These are the three new cases and the hearing dates I'm aware of (I have yet to find out whether those are first hearings--as I believe--or already trials):

  • Case no. 21 (<= that's the number of the chamber, i.e., court division) O 17752/19 over EP3300421 on a "slow mac-e for autonomous transmission in high speed uplink packet access (hsupa) along with service specific transmission time control" (hearing date: November 25, 2020)

  • Case No. 21 O 17753/19 over EP3267722 on a "fixed hs-dsch or e-dch allocation for voip (hs-dsch without hs-scch/e-dch)" (hearing date: December 2, 2020)

  • Case no. 7 (= Presiding Judge Dr. Matthias Zigann's division) O 17751/19 over EP1797659 on a "slow mac-e for autonomous transmission in high speed uplink packet access (hsupa) along with service specific transmission time control" (hearing date: December 2, 2020)

This further escalation of the Avanci-Daimler dispute shows that the problem wouldn't go away even if Daimler felt forced to settle after a decision such as the one that may come down in Mannheim next month. The issues needs to be addressed. The European Commission has been waiting and waiting and waiting--but its hesitance has not helped in the slightest.

As I just mentioned Mannheim, I have meanwhile learned that Presiding Judge Dr. Peter Tochtermann of the Mannheim Regional Court's 7th Civil Chamber (Presiding Judge Dr. Holger Kircher's division is the 2nd Civil Chamber) held a trial on Friday in a non-automotive case, and from what I hear, that division still has the same perspective on FRAND as before, thereby declining to perform the same about-face as Judge Dr. Kircher's panel. Case law works has merely persuasive weight in Germany, so--unlike in Common Law jurisdictions--inconsistent decisions by the same court on the very same legal question would not be unheard of (no stare decisis doctrine). While I'm unaware of a high-profile question of patent law that would have been decided differently by judges of the same German court, I have read about cases in other fields of law. In one such case, the owners of different condominiums in the very same building in the Northern Bavarian city of Nuremberg brought lawsuits over the very same issue (no difference in facts or law), and one judge found for a plaintiff while another judge did the opposite.

It will be interesting to watch how this SEP injunction issue settles out before the Karlsruhe Higher Regional Court, provided that an appeal is brought and adjudicated prior to a poor mistreated defendant feeling forced to cave.

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Friday, February 14, 2020

Nokia and its trolls are losing left and right: LG defeats Conversant case in Munich over Nokia patent two days after Nokia itself lost to Daimler

This is a dreadful week for Nokia on the patent assertion front. A pathetic Nokia patent was held non-essential (thus non-infringed) by the Mannheim Regional Court on Tuesday, and yesterday (Thursday) afternoon, the 7th Civil Chamber (Presiding Judge: Dr. Matthias Zigann) of the Munich I Regional Court threw out a Conversant v. LG case over a Nokia patent (click on the image to enlarge; this post continues below the image):

The patent-in-suit, EP1173986 on a "method and arrangement for managing packet data transfer in a cellular system," was incorrectly alleged to be essential to the 4G/LTE cellular standard. Nokia's privateer asserted its broadest method claim (claim 1) and two apparatus claims of similar breadth, but to no avail. The court concluded that the transmission of a traffic volume indicator (TVI) in accordance with the LTE specification does not involve a direct selection of a channel as claimed by the patent. As a result, the LTE standard does not require any technical step going beyond the prior art.

The Nokia patents transferred to Conversant, which is basically acting as a licensing agency for the Finnish failed handset maker, have generally performed very poorly in litigation. Last month the Munich I Regional Court held an early first hearing in a Conversant v. Daimler case, and that patent doesn't appear to have impresssed anyone either.

Nokia failed on Tuesday (Mannheim), indirectly (because it used Conversant as its front) failed on Thursday (Munich), and we'll probably hear very soon that mediation with Daimler and its suppliers failed this week, too.

The mostly Nordic protectionists in the European Commission who are preventing the Directorate-General for Competition (DG COMP) from formally investigating Nokia's unFRANDly refusal to license component makers need to wake up. If anyone still thinks that Nokia is "the Pride of Europe" in terms of wireless innovation, the performance of its patents in litigation shows that it's not. It would be a far smarter decision for Europe to focus on opportunities in connected cars and the wider Internet of Things (IoT). Nokia is basically fin(n)ished.

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Thursday, November 21, 2019

Apple joins Intel in suing Softbank-owned Fortress for anticompetitive patent abuse through web of trollish subsidiaries

Last month, Intel brought an antitrust complaint in the Northern District of California over Softbank-owned Fortress Investment's patent aggregation, obfuscation, and litigation tactics. Fortress's web of hyperaggressive patent assertion entities includes a huge and growing number of legal entities, some of whom have such names as Uniloc (which sued Apple 25 times and Google even 35 times), VLSI, DSS, Inventergy (which threatened an alleged infringer with an "IP bloodbath"), IXI, Seven Networks, and KIP CR (the CR in that name stands for "crossroads").

The good news for the trolls is that Intel withdrew its complaint. The bad news for them--but excellent news for product-focused companies who feel that enough is enough--is that the complaint came back with a vengeance as Intel and Apple made a joint filing yesterday as Reuters's Stephen Nellis was first to report (this post continues below the document):

19-11-20 Intel-Apple Antitr... by Florian Mueller on Scribd

In terms of the claims and prayers for relief, what's changed is mostly that Apple alleges FRAND violations. Uniloc is mostly or exclusively asserting--against Apple--standard-essential patents (SEPs) that previously belonged to Philips. (I've just recently become aware of a Philips patent licensing tactic in the LED segment that raises some very serious questions as well.)

The new complaint states some numbers I hadn't seen in the original one. For an example, there are estimates that tens of billions of dollars have been invested in patent litigation, and "the largest litigation investor reported having investments of $2.8 billion in 2019."

The amounts that some Fortress trolls are seeking from Apple are shocking. For an example, "VLSI claims up to $7.1 billion in connection with eight patents in the California Action and multiple billions of dollars in damages in the Delaware I Action." And that's just a small and limited part of the overall litigation activity by Fortress-controlled companies against Apple. Another group of Fortress entities, Uniloc, is seeking damages from Apple in the range of $2.6 billion to %5.1 billion from only 4 (!) of the 25 aforementioned Uniloc v. Apple cases as you can see on pages 30 and 31 of the complaint. According to Apple, "Uniloc "simply adopted the amounts that Apple sought from Samsung in litigation for Apple's patents." What Apple means is what Uniloc wants on a per-unit basis. I've criticized Apple very strongly for some of its damages claims against Samsung, but even if one agreed with what Apple wanted from Samsung at the time, it just wouldn't make sense to copy and paste an amount when it's about completely unrelated patents.

The fact that Apple has thrown its weight behind the case--in addition to Intel, which took the initiative last month--has several effects:

  • Intel's complaint already mentioned the cases against Apple, but having the target of dozens of the relevant cases directly involved raises the profile of the problem.

  • While most Silicon Valley jurors will likely have heard of Intel, Apple is more of a household brand.

  • It would presumably have been difficult for Intel to make some of the FRAND breach arguments that Apple, as a target of SEP assertions by Softbank, has brought in the joint complaint.

  • With both Intel and Apple based on the outskirts of San Jose, it should be easiser this time to keep the case in San Jose (where the complaint was filed) rather than having it reassigned within the district to San Francisco.

Now I only wish Google--another target of dozens of Fortress-funded patent lawsuits--could also join so the industry presents a united front to those industrialized patent trolls. But even if Google elected to stay on the sidelines, the combination of Intel and Apple will put Fortress and--by extension--Softbank under serious pressure.

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Sunday, October 27, 2019

Intel antitrust lawsuit takes aim at Softbank-owned Fortress Investment's patent aggregation, obfuscation, and litigation tactics

As this week draws to a close, I realize that the most important IP topic of the week was the role of financial engineering behind some of the most aggressive patent transfers and assertions. Huawei's counsel in the Unwired Planet v. Huawei case told the Supreme Court of the UK that Unwired's aggressive attempts to monetize former Ericsson patents amounted to "leveraged financial engineering." Earlier in the week, Intel filed an antitrust and unfair competition complaint in the Northern District of California against Fortress Investment and three of its subsidiaries (two of which are patent assertion entities named VLSI Technology and DSS Technology Management). Fortress Investment was in free fall until it was acquired by Japan's Softbank for $3.3 billion in 2017.

In its lawsuit filed on Monday (October 21, 2019), Intel alleges antitrust violations

  • either in the market for patents for high-tech consumer and enterprise electronic devices and components or software therein and processed used to manufacture them

  • or, in the narrower alternative, in the market for licenses to Fortress's aggregate portfolio.

Antitrust analysis generally starts with market definition. There must be a market in which someone has a dominant position and acts abusively.

Intel isn't saying that investments in patent licensing firms or large-scale acquisitions of patents by patent assertion entities would always be illegal, or that trollish litigation tactics raise competition concerns. The first couple of pages of the complaint discuss the policy implications of patent assertion entities (PAEs) at a generic level, but the specific case is about certain structural and behavioral characteristics of Fortress's industrial-scale patent acquisition and assertion business model.

Citing to what network technology company Sonus Network alleged in a case against one of Fortress's numerous shell companies, Inventergy, the complaint quotes that particular entity's CEO as telling Sonus that "Fortress[,] does not settle" in litigation and, in the absence of a license deal palatable to Fortress, Sonus would face "an IP bloodbath." The flowery language of that threat does not per se constitute an antitrust violation, and the complaint doesn't say or suggest so. It merely serves to illustrate how little Fortress's business model has to do with innovation and to what extent the business model is simply to create, and capitalize on, a patent reign of terror. Case in point, a particularly well-known Fortress entity, Uniloc, previously caught my attention because it shows up in the RPX Daily Litigation Alert very often as they've brought dozens of lawsuits against Apple and Google, as well as other defendants.

Fortress apparently sets up and shuts down patent assertion entities at an unusually high frequency. They transfer patents between them, sometimes as a result of subsidiaries being unable to meet their payment obligations to the holding company. Similarly, they just dismiss complaints in one venue to refile somewhere else. And when patent claims are found invalid, they sometimes come up with many dozens of amended claims that allegedly don't have any more merit (as they just add some meaningless terms to the claim language), but enable them to keep suing forever.

Again, vexatious and oppressive litigation tactics don't in and of themselves constitute anticompetitive conduct. The point I found particularly interesting from an antitrust angle is that Intel explains how Fortress systematically acquires, through different subsidiaries, patents covering alternative techniques so as to make it practically impossible to work around all of those patents without Fortress being able to allege (whether with or, more likely, without merit) some infringement(s) at any rate. I couldn't find the term "patent thicket" in the complaint, but that's the one that came to my mind when I read the related passage:

"23. Further, aggregating a massive portfolio of electronics patents allows Fortress and its PAEs to amass a range of patents that are both substitutes for and complements to one another. When a firm wants to build an electronic device, such as a smartphone, there are many ways to do so. Each alternative requires multiple technologies. However, the alternatives do not require the same combination of technologies. For example, Alternative 1 might require technologies A, B and C, while Alternative 2 might require technologies D, E and F. The technologies used for Alternative 1 (A, B and C) are complements: they are each needed to create the device using Alternative 1. Similarly, the technologies used for Alternative 2 (D, E, and F) are economic complements. The technologies comprising Alternative 1 are also a substitute for the technologies comprising Alternative 2, because the bundle of technologies used in Alternative 1 can be used as a substitute for the bundle of technologies used in Alternative 2.

"24. There are many possible permutations of complement and substitute technologies for electronics patents. For instance, Alternative 3 might require technologies A, C and D. In that scenario, the technologies bundled in Alternative 3 are a substitute for the technologies bundled in Alternatives 1 and 2 respectively; A, C, and D are complements in the production of Alternative 3; and technology D is a substitute for technology B. Technologies can thus be both substitutes and complements. If Alternative 4 used technologies A, B, and D, then B and D are complements for Alternative 4, and substituting D for B changes Alternative 1 to Alternative 3."

Another allegation is that Fortress requires companies to license numerous patents deemed meritless (so weak that they "never would have been asserted by their former owners") in order to license those that are not that weak. Package deals are common in many industries, and the allegation here is very much about Fortress's patent aggregation strategies. It's not about aggregation of the efficient kind where licensees would be presented with a one-stop solution: while the Fortress web of companies as a whole engages in large-scale patent aggregation, companies face royalty demands from numerous Fortress companies and are never offered a deal covering the patents held by all Fortress entities.

According to Intel's complaint, "Fortress and its PAEs foreclose the possibility—which existed before aggregation—that litigation can be an economic alternative to licensing patents." In other words, Fortress allegedly bases its monetization strategy in no small part on the nuisance value of meritless patent lawsuits that result in what I would call hard (i.e., legal fees) and soft (i.e., distraction of employees) costs to those forced to defend against Fortress's infringement actions.

The complaint mentions the following Fortress PAEs--note that any of those PAEs may itself have spawned numerous companies (in the U.S. as well as abroad):

  • VLSI Technologies allegedly discussed three alternative ways of helping NXP maximize its income from a part of its patent portfolio: Financing, Privateering, and Corporate Carve Out (an acquisition of a copany division along with its patents). Guess what--the chosen route was Privateering. Two years ago, VLSI asserted eight former NXP patents "against virtually every one of Intel's microprocessors ever sold since 2011" and sought $7.1 billion. That first case got stayed when PTAB IPRs were instituted against six of the patents-in-suit. Thereafter, VLSI brought a couple of Delaware cases, at least one of which also involved a multi-billion-dollar damages claim. But with injunctions not being realistically available in the U.S. (except from the ITC in the form of import bans), VLSI is also suing Intel in China.

  • DSS sued Intel as one of various defendants (electronics companies as well as retailers like Wal-Mart). Intel settled earlier this year, but presumably on very favorable terms as the patent claims-in-suit had been declared invalid by the PTAB.

  • Uniloc's dozens of lawsuits were mentioned above. To be precise, various Uniloc entities have so far sued Apple 25 times in the U.S. (Eastern and Western Districts of Texas), apparently mostly or exclusively over cellular standard-essential patents acquired from Philips, and over the course of only three months brought a total of 35 lawsuits against Google. That's 60 just between Apple and Google--and there have been more than 70 other Unioc infringement suits already.

  • Inventergy acquired many hundreds of patents from companies like Nokia, Panasonic, and Huawei, then sued Apple, HTC, and ZTE in the District of New Jersey and is seeking an ITC exclusion order (import ban).

  • IXI sued Samsung, BlackBerry, and Apple.

  • Seven Networks sued ZTE, Samsung, and Google, and apparently got those three companies to settle before also suing Apple.

  • KIP CR (= Crossroads) P1 has sued a number of companies including Huawei and Oracle. That entity even challenged the constitutionality of PTAB IPRs, but the Supreme Court denied that cert petition.

This problem is undoubtedly a whole lot bigger and more severe--and, therefore, more harmful to industry and consumers--than conventional "patent trolling." It will be interesting to see what else comes to light in the course of this litigation. Finally, here's the complaint:

19-10-21 Intel Antitrust Co... by Florian Mueller on Scribd

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Friday, October 25, 2019

Leveraged patent engineering meets leveraged financial engineering: Unwired Planet v. Huawei (UK Supreme Court hearing)

Many--obviously not all--policy makers and judges way overestimate the "innovation" behind standard-essential patents (SEPs). In reality, the intrinsic value of the "inventions" covered by SEPs is usually anything but impressive, and most of what licensees agree or are forced to pay for SEP licenses is due to patentees mostly capturing the value of the standard.

A rational valuation needs to focus on the commercial value of the incremental technical benefits of a claimed invention over the state of the art. That delta is all it's worth. Typically, that value is very low because there are numerous ways--sometimes practically an infinite number of them--to solve the kind of technical problem at hand, such as encoding a data stream for the purpose of radio transmission or giving priority to the handsets of first responders over regular users of a network at its capacity limit. But once a patent becomes a SEP because a particular technical solution (again, usually one of many viable options) it covers is adopted as part of a standard, all implementers of the standard need a license. Otherwise, if the patented technique hadn't made it into the standard, very few companies or maybe even none at all would pay for a license, given the availability of numerous replacements or workarounds.

It happens all the time that technically superior inventions are not adopted as part of the standard, especially because standard-setting is a horse-trading exercise along the lines of "I'll vote for some of your technical proposals today if you support some of mine tomorrow."

Those sitting at the standard-setting table aren't always true innovators. You find companies there that spends billions of dollars on research and development, and a portion of it on the kinds of techniques become part of a standard. But you also find plenty of opportunists who capitalize on their involvement in the process, and whose "engineers" don't truly invent useful things but primarily seek to anticipate where the standard-setting discussion is headed in order to file for SEPs. Those aren't engineers in a traditional R& D sense--they're practically patent engineers.

I prefer not to name examples, but I'll describe a couple without identifying them. There's a former handset maker that has massively reduced its investment in genuine R&D and is nowadays far more interested in opportunistic patenting. There's a non-producing entity that participates in standard-setting and litigates quite often, but contrary to what they claim, companies focused on making products believe that the NPE's "engineers" spend the bulk of their time just writing opportunistic patent applications.

Two researchers, Byeongwoo Kang and Rudi Bekkers, authored a paper on this subject on behalf of the Eindhoven Centre for Innovation Studies (ECIS), entitled "Just-in-time inventions and the development of standards: How firms use opportunistic strategies to obtain standard-essential patents (SEPs)". They examined the patenting behavior of participants in standard-setting and identified unusual filing activity around key standard-setting meetings:

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

Obtaining SEPs is a high-leverage form of patent engineering. The fruits of that effort are sometimes sold to non-practicing entities, which is called privateering. Yesterday, counsel for Huawei in the UK Supreme Court hearing in Unwired Planet v. Huawei (consolidated with Conversant v. ZTE) explained the business models behind those SEP assertions:

"You need to feed into the mix that these are actions by NPEs, non-practising entities, owned by private equity funds [separately, Mr. Howard clarified that there's nothing wrong with private equity and he frequently represents such firms] who see an opportunity to profit through this tactic. That is revealed -- I mean it is fairly startling. If you could go to the supplementary bundle and to Apple's intervention, [...] and what has happened, what one first got was the Unwired Planet case. Following that Conversant jumped on the band wagon against Huawei. What has given rise to the $8 billion claim against Apple and this is based upon -- so what you get is a golden ticket or a golden patent, you establish this '818 [patent] works and you then get up, gather round a whole lot of other patents and of course the owners of them, who have them in a portfolio, people like Ericsson and Nokia, would be quite happy to sell off a proportion of their patents which they have in a portfolio in order to allow this to take place where they also get part of the return [...]"

Mr. Howard also discussed specifically the strategic situation of Nokia and Ericsson, the companies that provided patents to Conversant and Unwired Planet:

"Yes, and one can infer that is what is happening in the other one. The reason -- one needs to it look at the commercial reality of this. Nokia and Ericsson have these portfolios of patents. Why are they commercially doing this? It is, when they embark on cross-licences as is what had been happening with people like Huawei, then they get a certain value but then they are getting mostly done through the cross-licensing effect, but as their interest in mobile phones has declined because they missed a trick in the market and they got overtaken by Huawei, Apple, Samsung and so on, they exploit [he means through making products] the patents less and they have an opportunity -- and this is in the evidence, the judge dealt with this -- Ericsson for instance saw this as a means to extract more money. I do not say again there is necessarily anything wrong, but what one does need to see is that this case, Unwired Planet and Conversant and the claim against Apple is all about a form of leveraged financial engineering. One should not, I would respectfully suggest, have one's blinkers on about that." (emphasis added)

A few minutes prior to the last passage I quoted, Mr. Howard named the investors behind the privateers:

"At paragraph 5 Apple explain who Unwired and Conversant are and they have brought up these patents. If you look at footnote you will see that PanOptis, which is the company that owns Unwired, is owned by funds managed by affiliates of Brevet Capital Management, a private equity company and Conversant is owned by a group of investors led by Sterling Partners, another private equity company. I am not saying there is anything wrong with private equity. Fortunately, they often send me instructions. But what I do say is that what one has to recognize is that this case is about what is perceived to be an opportunity to leverage. What is happening is the English courts' injunctive powers are being used in order to, frankly, make a nice return." (emphasis added)

If that leverage incentivized true innovation, it could still be a good deal for society at large. But for the reasons explained further above, that's not the case, at least not to the tune of $8 billion (the claim against Apple alone), which has several more zeroes than the intrinsic value of the claimed inventions--the one they'd still have it they had never made it into the standard.

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Sunday, October 20, 2019

Judicial imperialist Birss rewound 3,000 years to crown himself King Solomon of FRANDland--dethronement is nigh: Unwired Planet v. Huawei

First things first: CONGRATULATIONS to now-Lord Justice Richard Arnold, who was sworn in a few days ago as a new IP judge at the UK Court of Appeal. For the time being, Justice Colin Birss is now the only (at least the only well-known) patent-specialized judge at the court below, the England & Wales High Court (EWHC). Some thought Justice Birss was going to be promoted sooner, but Lord Justice Arnold, whom I listened to earlier this year, is far more likely to bring balance to the appeals court.

Who knows--maybe the decision-makers read Justice Birss's Unwired Planet v. Huawei ruling, which came down to letting a SEP holder enforce an injunction only because the defendant declined to enter into a global (as opposed to UK-specific) portfolio license on terms dictated by the UK court, is not just an outlier. It was and, until overruled, continues to be outrageous. If considered, that one would have done nothing to boost his chances. But what's easily ten times worse is that the UK Court of Appeal affirmed it.

The next four days--Monday through Thursday--the Supreme Court of the UK, which granted the equivalent of a cert petition by Huawei, will hold a hearing that is the last chance to dissuade the UK judiciary from going further down Disaster Road.

Unlike in the U.S. or Germany, where hearings by the top court for patent infringement cases are focused on narrow legal questions and take only a couple of hours, the Supreme Court of the UK will look at this in great depth and from many angles. While Unwired Planet is where things went awry first, that appeal was consolidated with Conversant v. ZTE.

Huawei has more than one potential way of winning. For an example, the grant of an injunction was reversible error simply because Unwired Planet was found not to have made a FRAND-compliant offer--enough of a reason under the CJEU's Huawei v. ZTE framework to deny injunctive relief. And he reads the "ND" part out of "FRAND" (or at least applies it in antitrust--not contractual--terms). But the two most fundamental--and interrelated--questions are whether a UK court should coerce a defendant into a global portfolio license at all, and even if that was considered a possibility under some circumstances, whether that would even apply in a case like this: Huawei generates only about 1% of its worldwide sales in the UK, making the choice of venue nothing but (extreme) forum shopping on Unwired Planet's part.

Apart from patent monetization-centric companies like Qualcomm, Ericsson (which fed Unwired Planet with patents), and Nokia (which sold patents to Conversant), the technology industry at large stands behind Huawei and ZTE. The last case of a similar profile in which everyone I talked to hoped for reversal by the highest court was the design patent damages (to the extent of unapportioned disgorgement) Apple v. Samsung case.

In January 2015, Justice Birss himself was still on the right track in Vringo v. ZTE:

"I could see a very different circumstance if Vringo had made a FRAND offer for the [UK patent-in-suit] itself and that offer had not been accepted. Then an injunction might well follow. In that sort of case, unlike the one based on the global portfolio licence, the threat of the injunction, which is after all a territorial remedy, would not be being used to create some sort of international coercion or coercion about other patent rights." (emphases added)

Between that sensible holding, a subsequent occasion on which he reiterated that view, and the Unwired Planet v. Huawei mess, Justice Birss--one of many European judges who are anxious to see the Unified Patent Court put in place at long last--radicalized himself and went off the deep end.

It's a longstanding principle of patent law that it confers territorial rights. Even if multiple patents belong to the same patent family as they share an original specification and its priority date, a British patent is not a U.S. patent is not a Chinese patent.

With "coercion," Justice Birss, prior to his self-radicalization, was spot-on. While his Unwired Planet v. Huawei ruling doesn't formally order Huawei to enter into a global portfolio license agreement, that's simply the net effect unless Huawei would prefer to just exit the UK market. Unwired Planet's enforcement of the injunction would serve the purpose of what would otherwise (in the event of a court ordering specific performance) be contempt sanctions--very draconian ones in this case.

It's not in the interest of justice to let a court in one country simply presume the validity and infringement of patents in another jurisdiction, given that patent law does differ. In a decade of watching patent infringement cases closely, I've seen many situations in which patents from the same family fared differently not just because of judges taking different views (that happens even within the same jurisdiction all the time, especially with patent cases) but for venue-specific reasons. For an example, I've seen parties raise prior use defenses in Germany, and what they presented had (to have) happened only in Germany. I've seen prior art being deemed eligible in one jurisdiction but not in another, simply based on whether something one could find in a particular unversity library wasn't deemed public knowledge elsewhere.

It's disrespectful of other jurisdictions to adjudicate what they should rule on. This is called comity of nations. It's also an issue in connection with antisuit injunctions, a topic Professor Jorge Contreras touches on in his new paper, "The new extraterritoriality: FRAND ryoyalties, anti-suit injunctions and the global race to the bottom in disputes over standard-essential patents." Violating that principle has been described as "judicial imperialism," which appears to have become Justice Birss's school of thought.

The fact that Justice Birss set a global base royalty rate with a potential for further increases based on the status of local SEPs held by the same party doesn't solve the problem that Unwired Planet might simply not be entitled to a single cent in some places (or, if not to nothing, to much less than what Justice Birss determined).

Justice Birss based his coercive approach on the fact that real-world negotiations typically result in global portfolio licenses. But even when a court of law analyzes what would or might happen in the real world, a court will never have the full breadth of options available that private parties do when they negotiate with each other. There must be limits as to what can be imposed on someone against his will.

Paragraph 377 of Justice Birss's decision is a textbook example of a fundamentally flawed approach to an important question of fact: the number of relevant SEPs (i.e., SEPs reading on the cellular standards at issue in the case), as the question of how much Unwired Planet is entitled should not lead to an aggregate royalty on everyone's SEPs that would be excessive royalty-stacking:

"The number for 4G handsets [proposed by Huawei] is 1812 and is much too high. The corresponding number in [Unwired Planet's proposal] is 355 but that number is much too low if it is to represent all Relevant SEPs. I think both values are out by about a factor of two. Half of 1812 is 906 while twice 355 is 710. Splitting the difference takes one to 800. Standing back, about 800 is fair and in my judgment an appropriate figure for the pool of 4G/LTE patents. Applying that as the denominator in a fraction to determine the share S which Unwired Planet’s patents represent from the pool gives 6/800 = 0.75%." (emphasis added)

Give me a break. The part I highlighted simply assumes that justice is served by assuming either party exaggerated by a factor of two, just in opposite directions.

There's nothing there that supports either the finding that one number is too high (other than the reasonable assumption that a SEP holder obviously benefits from a lower number (because then the share is higher) and a defendant conversely would like it to be high.

This. Is. Primitive.

It might be the way that a kindergarten teacher resolves a dispute between two children. Hopefully, those kids will acquire greater analytical skills when they grow up.

A similar approach may have been deemed wise in the case of the Judgment of Solomon (whether or not that story actually happened). But nowadays motherhood could be determined based on a DNA test instead of threatening to cut a baby in half. For FRAND rates, there are studies, and there are expert witnesses.

There have been roughly 3,000 years of legal evolution since Solomon's era. Justice Birss, a patent zealot, chose to rewind those three millennia. Now there's only one time machine that can put us all back into the 21st century: the Supreme Court of the UK will hopefully--and I'm very optimistic--dethrone this self-crowned King Solomon of FRANDland.

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Tuesday, May 14, 2019

Nokia privateer Conversant can't enforce SEP against standards-compliant Apple products due to Nokia's late disclosure: inequitable conduct

Conversant, previously known under other names such as Core Wireless, may very well be the wireless SEP privateer with the highest failure rate in litigation. And it's probably because Nokia sold them weak patents, more so than I would attribute this lack of success to the work performed by Conversant's litigators.

Last month Conversant lost a French appeal, and it became known that LG had offered Conversant less than 1% of what it wanted. Conversant has also been grossly unsuccessful against Apple in the U.S., with dozens of patent assertions having failed. They're now increasingly looking to the UK as a last resort, attempting to leverage the England & Wales High Court's and UK Court of Appeal's decisions in favor of global portfolio rate-setting--but Huawei and ZTE may get that precedent overturned as the UK Supreme Court granted their petitions to appeal (the UK equivalent of a cert petition) last month.

Conversant's latest failure in its U.S. litigation campaign against Apple reflects highly unfavorably on Nokia's behavior as a participant in standard-setting processes. On Friday (May 10, 2019), U.S. Magistrate Judge Nathanael M. Cousins granted--on remand from the Federal Circuit--an Apple motion to hold U.S. Patent No. 6,477,151 on "packet radio telephone services" unenforceable against Apple products practicing the (fairly old) GPRS (General Packet Radio Service) data communications standard related to GSM (this post continues below the document):

19-05-10 Order Holding Late... by on Scribd

Judge Cousins is in charge of discovery and similar matters in the FTC v. Qualcomm antitrust case Judge Lucy H. Koh is presiding over. Here, however, he's himself presiding over a Conversant v. Apple case, and there is a Qualcomm connection because of an old Qualcomm v. Broadcom case in which "Qualcomm's manipulation of its intellectual property made its nondisclosure [of a patent to the standard-setting organization until after its litigation against Broadcom began] particularly exceptional and therefore egregious."

Judge Cousins's order analyzes Nokia's misconduct with respect to the '151 patent for the purpose of determining (as the Federal Circuit instructed him to do on remand) "whether Nokia or [Conversant] inequitably benefited from Nokia's failure to disclose [the '151 patent to ETSI on a timely basis], or whether Nokia's conduct was sufficiently egregious to justify finding implied waiver without regard to any benefit that Nokia or [Conversant] may have obtained as a result of that misconduct." In other words, the question here is whether Nokia's inequitable conduct was just inequitable conduct or whether it was as outrageous as what Qualcomm did back in the day. Of course, Conversant (and, by extension, Nokia) would have preferred for the court not to identify any wrongdoing, but that wasn't realistically going to happen based on what the Federal Circuit had already stated in its decision to remand. For an example, the Federal Circuit had written that Nokia "had a duty to disclose its IPR no later than June 1998 [and] its later disclosure was clearly untimely and not sufficient to cure the earlier breach of its duty."

While the fact that Nokia disclosed its IPR to ETSI (the leading wireless standard-setting organization) four years later than it actually had to gave Judge Cousins pause, but ultimately he found that Nokia had not done much: it basically had just failed to disclose in time, as opposed to Qualcomm, which in Judge Cousins's words had "conspired to 'extend' its pre-existing patents, which, in the words of its own employees, covered 'almost exclusively' different material."

All in all, Nokia's "misconduct does not clearly and convincingly rise to the level of 'affirmative egregious misconduct' required," but misconduct it is, and the court then does find that "Nokia and Conversant have obtained ...] an unfair competitive advantage" in the sense of Conversant (and, by extension, Nokia) now trying to leverage the fact that the patent is standard-essential, which it might never have become if ETSI, prior to adopting the related technique, had been aware of the existence of this patent.

Judge Cousins wasn't persuaded by Conversant's argument that its FRAND licensing commitment rules out inequitable benefits.

The sanction here is that the United States District Court for the Northern District of California has granted Apple's motion for unenforceability on the basis of an implied waiver that now precludes Conversant from enforcing the '151 patents and any derivatives thereof against products practicing the GPRS standard, including the Apple products accused in that particular case.

Conversant can appeal this order, but since the Federal Circuit had already taken some pretty clear positions in its decision to remand the case to San Jose, it's not likely that the order granting Apple's motion would be reversed.

This will hopefully serve to discourage companies participating in standard-setting from similar misconduct. It's absolutely key that those sitting at the standard-development make timely disclosures of any intellectual property rights they hold that might read on certain techniques before those are formally adopted.

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Thursday, April 25, 2019

LG offered Nokia privateer Conversant less than 1% of the standard-essential patent license fees it demands--and even that turns out unwarranted

Privateering--the practice of large patent holders formally transferring patents to non-practicing entities that will assert them on their behalf (practically, those deals amount to agency-like arrangements in many cases)--is an issue that has been facing the mobile device industy for a number of years. Nokia and Ericsson are particularly active in that way.

A couple of particularly aggressive privateers--Unwired Planet (mostly fed by Ericsson) and Conversant (a Nokia patent assertion partner)--are parties to a UK Supreme Court proceeding I blogged about earlier this week. One of them, Conversant, was dealt a real blow last week by the Cour d'Appel de Paris--the appeals court for the Paris region, to which all patent rulings by the Tribunal de Grande Instance (TGI) de Paris are appealed. A panel of three appellate judges under Presiding Judge David Peyron ruled against Conversant's appeal of a TGI ruling on several standard-essential patent (SEP) assertions by Conversant (formerly known as Core Wireless) against LG Electronics (this post continues below the document):

19-04-16 French Appellate R... by on Scribd

Conversant's appeal related to a handful of patents. But for three of them, the appeals court held that Conversant failed to provide the information required to make an essentiality determination. While the appeals court declined to declare the French parts of the remaining three patents invalid, it also determined that EP0978210 on "connecting a multimode terminal to the network in a mobile communication system" nor EP0950330 on a "user terminal for mobile communications" are not standard-essential. With respect to EP'210, the court's claim construction is so narrow that the patent can be worked around by performing a measurement of signals periodically as opposed to only in situations of poor network coverage. In any event, the 3G/4G standard specifications say that such measurement should be performed, but also state that devices may simply not do so. EP'330 was found non-essential on two different grounds, either one of which would be sufficient on its own. There choice of high-level protocols (IPv4 and IPv6) is not explicitly required by the specifications of the telecommunications standard, and it's debatable whether IPv4 and IPv6 constitute alternative protocols as opposed to simply different versions of one protocol (the Internet Protocol = IP).

This French appeals court took the position that FRAND licensing obligations apply only to actually essential patents, not merely declared-essential ones. Courts in some other jurisdictions have taken a similar position, but there's an alternative approach according to which a patent holder's FRAND declaration applies to non-essential patents as well.

As a result of its holdings of non-essentiality, the French court declined to make a FRAND rate determination. What's interesting, however, is the enormous discrepancy between the parties' positions. Conversant was seeking a royalty based on the net sales price of an entire handset (the typical royalty base issue) amounting to 0.149% for 4G devices sold in the "principal markets" and 0.170% for 3G devices sold in such markets, with lower pecentages for China. Conversant claimed that this was consistent with Justice Birss's decision in the UK case Unwired Planet v. Huawei.

By contrast, LG offered (depending on markets and whether only 2G, the combination of 2G and 3G, or the whole package of 2G+3G+4G was implemented in a device) between 1.62 and 5.73 thousandths of a U.S. cent per device and per patent family. In order to make those numbers easier to understand, LG also calculated a dollar amount per one million devices from $16.2 to $57.3. Based on Conversant's own claim of owning 22 SEP families, this would in the most optimistic of all scenarios have amounted to 22 times $57.3 = $1,260.60 per one million devices.

Even if one assumed an average net sales price of only $100 per LG phone (which is a very low number), Conversant's own claim would amount to $0.149 per device, or $149K per one million devices--more than one hundred times the $1,260.60 per one million devices that LG offered.

Such discrepancies are not unheard of in the context of FRAND rate disputes. In April 2013, Judge James L. Robart of the United States District Court for the Western District of Washington awarded Motorola Mobility, in a FRAND case brought by Microsoft, less than one-twentieth of a percent of its original demand. Later that year, in the Northern District of Illinois, Judge James F. Holderman held that 19 WiFi patents belonging to a patent assertion entity named Innovatio IP Ventures were worth less than 10 U.S. cents per unit.

While Innovatio had hoped for a lot more than 10 cents per unit, the question is whether Conversant is ultimately going to get anything from the likes of Huawei and LG. Conversant's pathetic results in France are not going to impress the Supreme Court of the UK.

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Tuesday, April 23, 2019

Supreme Court of the UK grants Huawei's petition to appeal lower court's claim to global FRAND jurisdiction in Unwired Planet case

Generally, the UK enjoys an excellent reputation as a jurisdiction for patent infringement and validity cases. But no UK patent ruling has ever been even remotely as controversial as Justice Colin Birss's 2017 holding in Unwired Planet v. Huawei that an injunction should issue against an implementer of a standard-essential patent (SEP) who declines to take a global portfolio license from a patent holder (in this case, a privateer asserting mostly former Ericsson patents). Justice Birss's fundamentally flawed thinking was that only because SEP holders and SEP implementers in practice typically agree on worldwide portfolio licenses, Huawei was an unwilling licensee because it refused to take a worldwide portfolio license in order to avert a UK injunction over a single SEP deemed valid and infringed--never mind that Huawei generates only a tiny percentage of its global sales (maybe 1% or so) in the UK.

There's nothing wrong with companies agreeing on all sorts of things voluntarily. The problem here is that Justice Birss's approach would effectively force companies (unless they can just forego UK revenues for some time) to let a UK court set a global FRAND rate (in order to determine whether a company is or is not a willing licensee). Under that line of reasoning, UK courts would assume jurisdiction over, U.S., German or even Vietnamese patents, without being equipped to actually assess whether the courts in those jurisdictions would, under applicable national law, deem a given patent valid and infringed (or what they would consider a FRAND royalty under their antitrust or contract laws).

While the name of the England & Wales High Court (EWHC) suggests otherwise, it's actually the lowest court for UK patent cases. But, shockingly, the Court of Appeal of England & Wales upheld Justice Birss's global FRAND determination in October 2018.

Huawei filed a petition to appeal with the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom. Such a PTA is the same in the UK as a petition for writ of certiorari (colloquially, "cert petition") filed with the U.S. Supreme Court. It's not a given that the highest court of the land will take a look at a case.

In this particular case, I was very optimistic, simply because the question of extraterritorial jurisdiction is the proverbial issue for a country's top court to consider. And indeed, on April 11, the Supreme Court of the UK granted Huawei's petition, as the court's press office confirmed to me today (click on the image to enlarge; this post continues below the image):

The really important issue here is the one that first came up in Unwired Planet v. Huawei. But the Supreme Court of the UK decided, for good reason, to treat the Conversant Wireless cases (defendants: Huawei and ZTE) as related cases for the purposes of a Supreme Court review. The whole package has now been granted cert.

About a week before the Supreme Court of the UK made this decision, a former judge of the UK Court of Appeal who has meanwhile been appointed to the UK Supreme Court, Lord Kitchin, defended the decisions of the two lower courts at a Munich conference (where Judge James L. Robart of the United States District Court for the Western District of Washington noted that U.S. courts simply don't rule on foreign patents, citing one case in which a U.S. district court declined to do so even though both parties asked for a determination involving a foreign patent.

Lord Kitchin is not among the three Supreme Court judges hearing the case now. Chances are, however, that the "evangelism" he conducted at the Munich conference may also take place in London, in whatever shape or form.

The Supreme Court will likely hold a hearing in the fourth quarter.

I'm going to follow the Supreme Court proceedings closely and will also try to attend the hearing. This is about an extremely important FRAND-related issue. I hope the UK, as a patent jurisdiction, will regain everyone's total respect when all is said and done in this context.

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Tuesday, April 2, 2019

Judicial backlash to privateering: German appeals court holds acquirer of standard-essential patents bound to previous patent holder's FRAND promise

The patent system is prone to abuse because, contrary to widespread misconception, the commercial value of patents lies in legal uncertainty, and patent offices around the globe prioritize quantity over quality (institutionalized excess and race to the bottom, especially with leaders such as USPTO Director Andrew Iancu or the current president of the EPO and his predecessor). Statistics show that most patents are invalid as granted, and even those that are valid rarely involve an inventive step of the impressive kind--and reasonable people can disagree on claim construction, which is why a fairly high percentage of all claim constructions are reversed on appeal.

Patent judges are increasingly aware of the issues, and it depends on each judge's style how they try to address the problem (such as by being ever more inclined to stay cases when the validity of a patent-in-suit is doubtful)--but the root cause (the aforementioned institutionalized excess) can't be addressed by them, so it all comes down to purely symptomatic treatment.

One form of abuse that constitutes a systemic threat is privateering: the practice of transferring patents to patent assertion entities whose business is to bring extortionate litigation. A few years ago I made a public call to "name and shame companies that feed patent trolls," and I'd like to refer you to such previous statements (you can find far better explanations of the privateering problem from others to be honest) rather than elaborate on this again.

The most famous patent-specialized German appellate judge, Dr. Thomas Kuehnen ("Kühnen" in German), Presiding Judge of the primary patent litigation senate (= panel) of the Düsseldorf Higher Regional Court and author of the leading German patent litigation manual (also available in English), is exceedingly patentee-friendly (think of him as the German answer to former Chief Judge Paul Michel), but enough is enough, even for him. While he was angry about the European Commission's pro-FRAND and pro-competitive interventions earlier this decade (he claimed pursuing antitrust claims for the pursuit of injunctions over FRAND-pledged patents was tantamount to "expropriation"), Juve Patent reported in late February that Judge Dr. Kuehnen's wrath was aimed at Unwired Planet, a privateer fed by Ericsson (and others) with patents asserted against, in that particular case, Huawei (and various other device makers in other actions).

I wholeheartedly agree with Judge Dr. Kuehnen that the transfer of SEPs for the purpose of extracting supra-FRAND royalties runs counter to the notion of FRAND licensing. And I don't think his "Wild West" analogy is an overstatement. It's really about the weaponization of patents and at least comes somewhat close to robbery.

On March 22, Judge Dr. Kuehnen's panel handed down the ruling in that Unwired Planet v. Huawei (with Huawei being the appellant). In that case, an expired patent was at issue, so the FRAND questions didn't involve the entitlement to injunctive relief. It was about monetary damages.

The Unwired Planet cases in different courts raise interesting and important issues related to patent damages and judicial determinations of royalties. In the UK, both the England & Wales High Court and the appeals court thought it made sense for a UK court to set a global FRAND royalty even when the defendant generates only a minuscule percentage (if the word "percentage" even makes sense here) of its global revenues in the UK. It obviously does not, and I'm hopeful that the Supreme Court of the UK will grant the petition to appeal in that case and a related Conversant case (over former Nokia patents). The press office of the UK Supreme Court told me that a decision may come down shortly before or after the Easter holiday. To me this looks like the epitome of a legal question that the highest court in a given land would want to take a look at: the extraterritorial reach of jurisprudence.

While I completely agree with Judge Dr. Kuehnen that privateering is unFRANDly and consider it great policy to combat that rampant and problematic practice (which I'd like to see courts around the globe tackle vigorously), I'll put my critique bluntly: I think Judge Dr. Kuehnen approached the issue along the lines of "if all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail," and legislated from the bench as if patent law were a parallel universe. He actually appears to be conscious of having taken a position that reasonable people can disagree with, which is why he explicitly authorized an appeal to the Federal Court of Justice. Normally German appeals courts don't do that, requiring an appellant to firstly file an "objection to non-admission [of the appeal]" (the German equivalent of a cert petition).

To be clear, I wouldn't have the slightest policy problem with his decision being upheld later. The outcome makes a lot of sense. But in my opinion, what Judge Dr. Kuehnen wants would require new legislation, plain and simple. The German government is evaluating a potential patent litigation reform measure, and maybe (though competition law per se falls within the European Union's acquis communautaire) the privateering issue could be addressed there as well.

Huawei raised various competition issues with Ericsson's transfer of a portfolio of cellular SEPs to Unwired Planet, and apparently some of them were previously raised by Samsung in parallel litigation.

There are three levels at which a privateering-style transaction can be thwarted by the courts:

  1. standing;

  2. antitrust violation through the transaction considering the specific terms and the overall circumstances and motives; and

  3. imposing restrictions on the acquirer (the privateer) based on the seller's obligations under competition law.

The first one, standing, is more interesting under U.S. law than German law. In Germany, a patent holder simply enjoys standing unless there's a problem with ownership, i.e., the chain of title. That's one of the issues Huawei raised in this case, but to no avail. Maybe there was an intermediary owner--an Ericsson entity--that held those patents for a couple of days before selling them on to Unwired Planet, but it really seems there was nothing serious there that could have decided the case. So far, so good.

Where I do disagree with Judge Dr. Kuehnen--and I dare to do it in such an outspoken way even though I'm aware of his incredible intellect and enormous prestige--is that he doesn't believe the second path (issues involving the transaction) has merit, and instead comes up with a creative but highly questionable construct along the lines of the third path: limiting the acquirer's entitlement to royalties based on a previous patent holder's obligations and licensing practices.

To give you an idea of how novel and unorthodox that approach is, it may help to remind you of the fact that Germany is a jurisdiction that doesn't even enable third-party beneficiaries (such as companies that are entitled to a FRAND license because of a FRAND promise made by a participant in a standard-setting process to a standard-setting organization) to enforce their rights like a direct contract. So even if Ericsson had never sold those patents to anyone, Huawei couldn't simply enforce third-party beneficiary rights to a FRAND license from Ericsson. But Judge Dr. Kuehnen's decision comes down to restricting Unwired Planet's rights vis-à-vis Huawei. So we're not talking about a third-party, but partically fourth-party, beneficiary rights.

It's not just about the FRAND commitment at an abstract level. It's that specific licensing terms could be deemed discriminatory based on what the previous patent holder did. (It would, of course, make sense to consider a previous patent holder's licensing terms in a FRAND analysis, but just an indication of what terms might have been agreed upon by parties.)

I know I'm repeating myself: I'm not against third-party or even fourth-party beneficiary rights in the FRAND context. Not at all. But I struggle with the dogmatic avenue that the Duesseldorf appeals court chose. The ruling seeks to create the notion of, for all practical intents and purposes, "in rem" rights, meaning rights that attach themselves to an asset (here, a patent) and benefit third parties vis-à-vis an acquirer.

German law provides for "in rem" rights in connection with real estate. For instance, a right of way so that neighbors can cross your property or the right to lay telephone lines. Those rights must, however, be notarized and are added to a public land register. If you agree on certain rights and obligations between neighbors by means of a mere inter partes agreement, there's no obligation on, or right benefiting, a future acquirer. What you can do then is add a clause to the agreement that requires a party, in the event of a sale, to ensure that the acquirer will enterinto the same obligations, including the obligation to pass those obligations on to the next acquirer. If this is done properly, you can at least sue someone who failed to pass an obligation on to the next buyer. If you make the slightest mistake there, tough luck...

Given the rigidity of German law in connection with the distinction between what is agreed upon between parties and what attaches itself to an asset, it's hard to see how implementers of standards could have far-reaching "in rem"-like rights when dealing with acquirers of patents.

What Judge Dr. Kuehnen appears to be coming from is this idea that intellectual property should be treated as much like real property as possible. That's a fallacy. In this case, it happens to nevertheless allow a pro-competitive, FRAND-compliant, result. But in most other cases, it leads to bad policy and bad case law.

The focus on the P in the term "IP" is also reflected by Judge Dr. Kuehnen not having any concerns over the terms of the Ericsson-Unwired Planet agreement. The ruling has no problem with Ericsson basically still being in charge and Ericsson having specifically told Unwired Planet to sue certain defendants--things that could even raise standing issues under U.S. law (depending on the facts).

Up to a certain point I think it is indeed important that patent holders are free to sell their assets. I agree, for instance, with the ruling that the defendant didn't show that the incremental litigation cost resulting from the distribution of a patent portfolio to additional entities reached an abusive extent (though the ruling suggests you'd basically have to sell each patent to a different acquirer to meet that standard).

It's just that the whole rationale reflects not only a property-centric perspective on patents (though in reality, patents are just a license to sue) but also the fact that its author has been focusing on patent law for decades and sort of lives in a parallel patent universe. A better mouse trap is needed badly.

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