Showing posts with label WiFi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WiFi. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 5, 2023

Will Huawei make European SEP case law history again? It may have brought first SEP complaint with Unified Patent Court (defendant: Netgear)

Potentially, Huawei v. Netgear could become the UPC equivalent of the Huawei v. ZTE ruling by the European Court of Justice. IAM was first to report on the first standard-essential patent (SEP) infringement action to have become discoverable in the Unified Patent Court's (UPC) registry. With a query involving Huawei, I've also been able to find the case details.

The UPC states this week's Monday (July 3) as the date of formal receipt. Apparently there have been other cases where the UPC's registry stated a date of formal receipt that differs significantly from the date of filing.

The patent-in-suit is EP3611989 on a "method and apparatus for transmitting wireless local area network information." Huawei previously asserted WiFi SEPs against Netgear in German courts. This, too, is a WiFi patent. Huawei's counsel is Dr. Tobias Hessel, who recently joined Clifford Chance from Hoyng Rokh Monegier.

Given the UPC's administrative childhood diseases, particularly with a view to its registry, it is not certain that this is the first SEP case to have been filed with the UPC. But at minimum it's the first one to have become discoverable.

The following screenshot shows how dysfunctional the UPC's register is (click on the image to enlarge):

That's a query for all pending infringement actions. It says there are 13 results, but the first results page lists only one case (instead of 9). Huawei v. Netgear is discoverable only if one runs a narrower search.

I also doubt that only 13 infringement cases have been filed with the UPC. A number of patent holders were preparing for the June 1 launch date.

The Munich I Regional Court has confirmed to me that a Huawei v. AVM (AVM is the WiFi router market leader in Germany) case will be heard by the court's 21st Civil Chamber (Presiding Judge: Dr. Georg Werner) on next week's Wednesday (July 12). The case no. is 21 O 2576/22, and the patent-in-suit is EP3337077 on a "wireless local area network information transmission method and apparatus".

Earlier today I shared via an email to those who have subscribed to notifications from this blog the announcement of Huawei's annual IP and innovation event, which will take place in Shenzhen and be webcast on Thursday, July 13.

Wednesday, June 7, 2023

Nokia obtained patent injunctions against 12 German resellers of OPPO, OnePlus devices: Mannheim Regional Court

The patent dispute between Nokia and OPPO (as well as the latter's OnePlus affiliate) continues to escalate, with no settlement in sight. Today a spokeswoman for the Mannheim Regional Court confirmed to me that on May 26, the court's Second Civil Chamber (Presiding Judge: Dr. Holger Kircher) granted Nokia injunctive relief against a dozen German resellers of OPPO and OnePlus devices.

The patent-in-suit is EP1704731 on a "method and apparatus for indicating service set identifiers to probe for" and the same court had already granted Nokia an injunction against OPPO over that patent about a year ago. It's not a standard-essential patent (SEP), though the wider patent spat is largely a 5G SEP dispute.

After two Mannheim injunctions (the aforementioned one, and one over a cellular SEP), OPPO (and OnePlus) left the German market last year. Meanwhile, another Chinese smartphone maker, Vivo, has also left the German market as a result of Nokia's patent enforcement.

The Mannheim court provided the list of parallel cases in which the May 26, 2023 decisions came down:

  • case no. 2 O 127/22: Nokia ./. Brodos AG

  • case no. 2 O 128/22: Nokia ./. Cyberport GmbH

  • case no. 2 O 129/22: Nokia ./. Drillisch Online GmbH

  • case no. 2 O 130/22: Nokia ./. Grand King Ltd

  • case no. 2 O 131/22: Nokia ./. Komsa AG

  • case no. 2 O 132/22: Nokia ./. MMS E-Commerce GmbH

    (MMS is the parent company of the Media Markt and Saturn consumer electronics stores)

  • case no. 2 O 133/22: Nokia ./. 1&1 Telecommuniction SE

  • case no. 2 O 134/22: Nokia ./. Logitel GmbH

  • case no. 2 O 135/22: Nokia ./. Otto GmbH & Co. KG

  • case no. 2 O 139/22: Nokia ./. expert e-commerce GmbH

  • case no. 2 O 140/22: Nokia ./. freenet DLS GmbH

  • case no. 2 O 147/22: Nokia ./. OTECH Germany GmbH.

Those resellers kept selling OPPO and OnePlus products after last year's Mannheim injunctions. Formally, they were not enjoined last year as they weren't named as defendants to the original infringement action, but now they are to the extent they offer OPPO and OnePlus products implementing the patent-in-suit.

Legally, Nokia is obviously within its rights to do that. But there are different schools of thought. Some patent holders refrain from enforcement action against resellers. It's a company-by-company and case-by-case question. While today's Nokia-branded phones are made by a company of which Nokia is only a minority shareholder, I'm wondering whether HMD's relationships with those resellers will be adversely impacted by this enforcement action.

Nokia argues that OPPO should take a license (" or enter into binding arbitration to find a fair outcome that works for both parties") and recalls that the dispute has been ongoing for almost two years. OPPO, however, has consistently taken the position that Nokia's royalty demands are supra-FRAND. OPPO is also countersuing Nokia in Germany.

I doubt that this enforcement against German resellers will change OPPO's position.

In the context of the proposed EU SEP Regulation, the fact that Nokia is using a non-SEP to bar those resellers from selling OPPO and OnePlus devices validates something I wrote in April: I discussed various reasons for which even implementers won't necessarily benefit from that envisioned regulation as non-SEPs might end up getting more weight, and I mentioned that in disputes of this kind, net licensors typically assert a mix of SEPs and non-SEPs.

Thursday, December 22, 2022

Another Huawei v. Amazon patent infringement lawsuit discovered: WiFi patent case in Mannheim, Germany

This is a quick follow-up to a post from Monday, Huawei suing Amazon in Germany over WiFi patent infringement--Chinese lawsuit previously became known.

Meanwhile the Landgericht Mannheim (Mannheim Regional Court) has also confirmed a Huawei v. Amazon action: case no. 2 O 109/22 (Presiding Judge: Dr. Holger Kircher) over EP2589177 on "modulation of signal field in a wlan [= WiFi] frame header".

The Munich I Regional Court hasn't confirmed a Huawei v. Amazon case yet, but two factors make it a possibility that Amazon also has to defend itself there:

  • Munich is such a popular venue that it would be unusual (if not even unheard of in recent years) to see a Dusseldorf-Mannheim combination as opposed to the traditional Dusseldorf-Mannheim-Munich "Grand Slam".

  • Different German litigators--none of them likely to be involved with this dispute here--have mentioned to me recently that the Munich court has an administrative bottleneck that results in considerable delay of (especially international) service of process. When cases are filed in Dusseldorf, Mannheim, and Munich on the same day against the same defendants, it is normally expected that any Munich complaints will be served much later on a given foreign defendant than the ones brought in Dusseldorf and Mannheim.

For those two reasons, I'll ask the Munich court again in January.

In the previous post on this dispute, you can find some further context, such as cases pending in China and in another German court (Dusseldorf Regional Court).

Monday, December 19, 2022

Huawei suing Amazon in Germany over WiFi patent infringement--Chinese lawsuit previously became known

A Huawei v. Amazon patent enforcement action in China already became known in October. I have since been trying to find out about similar cases in Germany, and the Dusseldorf Regional Court has confirmed the pendency of case no. 4b 65/22 (Presiding Judge: Dr. Daniel Voss ("Voß" in German)) over EP2491662 on a "number of streams indication for WLAN" (WLAN is another term for WiFi).

The same German court has already granted Huawei a default judgment against Netgear.

I have also asked the Munich I Regional Court and the Mannheim Regional Court whether they can confirm any Huawei v. Amazon cases. However, Munich replied that they cannot (which doesn't necessarily mean that there's nothing there, but German courts can only confirm cases when all defendants have been served, and the administration of the Munich court tends to be a bit slow with service of process), and Mannheim hasn't responded (it has recently been more difficult than at any point during the past ten years to obtain information from the Mannheim court).

Other cases brought by Huawei in Munich and Mannheim have, however, become known, such as cellular standard-essential patent (SEP) actions against the Stellantis automotive group (Fiat Chrysler, Peugeot, Opel etc.) in both Mannheim and Munich, and two cases in Munich against German Netgear competitor AVM. The Munich court's Seventh Civil Chamber held a Huawei v. AVM FRAND hearing on Thursday, largely behind closed doors. The former Presiding Judge, famous patent judge Dr. Matthias Zigann, was promoted to the appeals court (and is serving on the Unified Patent Court). At this point, a permanent successor has not been appointed to preside over the Munich I Regional Court's Seventh Civil Chamber. Judge Dr. Zigann's former deputy, Judge Benjamin Kuttenkeuler, is the chamber's Acting Presiding Judge and, in that role, presided over last week's Huawei v. AVM FRAND hearing. It's too early to tell, but I have yet to meet someone who would describe AVM as a perfectly willing licensee.

Huawei says patent infringement lawsuits are only a last resort when infringers are otherwise not prepared to engage in good-faith negotiations. That point was made again at last week's IAM webinar. Actions speak louder than words, and Huawei's patent cross-license agreement with OPPO, which was announced ten days ago, lends further credibility to Huawei's preference for the amicable resolution of licensing issues.

I expect all of the currently pending Huawei patent cases to be settled during the course of next year, and possibly even before the middle of the year.

Wednesday, November 30, 2022

Apple loses first patent case against Ericsson: Mannheim Regional Court rejects Apple's first offensive patent complaint that has come to judgment since 2014

The first final judgment (as opposed to a preliminary injunction ruling such as the one in Colombia) in the current multijurisdictional Ericsson-Apple patent dispute came down yesterday--and Apple lost an offensive case in Germany. Apart from design patent cases, it's the first judgment in an offensive technical (utility) patent case brought by Apple since the second case against Samsung that went to trial in San Jose in 2014.

As a spokeswoman for the court just informed me, the Second Civil Chamber (Presiding Judge: Dr. Holger Kircher) of the Landgericht Mannheim (Mannheim Regional Court) yesterday handed down a judgment in Ericsson's favor, rejecting Apple's patent infringement complaint and imposing all costs on the iPhone maker. Apple can appeal this decision to the Sixth Civil Senate (Presiding Judge: Andreas Voss ("Voß" in German)) of the Oberlandesgericht Karlsruhe (Karlsruhe Higher Regional Court).

The case no. is 2 O 9/22; the trial was held on October 18; and the patent-in-suit is EP2945332 on an "apparatus and methods for network resource allocation."

Ericsson was successfully defended by the Dusseldorf-based law firm of Kather Augenstein. I've found out now that Ericsson's lead counsel defending against this particular Apple lawsuit was Christopher Weber, who was supported by Dr. Christof Augenstein and Sophie Prudent.

The patent specification describes EP'332, which has not been declared essential to any cellular standard, as being "directed to a computer networking device (e.g., a router) which is adapted to allocate portions of a communications network or its available bandwidth between different uses." While the specification also says the claimed invention "relates generally to the field of data networks," it appears that Apple couldn't show that Ericsson's cellular (4G/5G) base stations infringe this patent that clearly has its roots in the WiFi space. That is obvious from the use of typical WiFi terminology such as "access point" in the claim language (emphases added):

A method for allocating a collective bandwidth of a plurality of wireless access points, the method comprising:

at a first wireless access point of the plurality of wireless access points

  • receiving a request for a first use from a wireless client device;

  • in response to the request for the first use, allocating a first portion of the collective bandwidth to the first use based at least in part on a bandwidth allocation rule that is dynamically set and that implements in part a bandwidth allocation of the collective bandwidth, wherein the bandwidth allocation rule is based on a level of network security associated with security requirements for different types of traffic;

  • allocating a second portion of the collective bandwidth to a second use different from the first use based at least in part on the bandwidth allocation rule; and

  • servicing the request for the first use using the first portion of the collective bandwidth,

  • wherein each of the plurality of wireless access points dynamically allocates one or more portions of the collective bandwidth to at least the first use or the second use based at least in part on one or more bandwidth allocation rules to maintain the bandwidth allocation of the collective bandwidth.

In theory, a patent stemming from WiFi research could cover such a foundational technique and be so broad that even cellular (4G/5G) base stations infringe it. But a patent holder would be lucky in that case, and Apple wasn't.

None of Ericsson's cases against Apple has come to judgment yet, but it's going to happen in the not too distant future. The Munich I Regional Court held two hearings (not yet full trials) in September and is inclined to find that the iOS version of WhatsApp (which Apple exclusively distributes due to its app distribution monopoly abuse) infringes an Ericsson non-standard-essential patent (non-SEP) as well as a standard-essential patent, with respect to which the Munich court denied Apple's motion to dismiss the complaint at this stage. Three weeks ago the Mannheim Regional Court heard an Ericsson v. Apple SEP case and appeared inclined to deem the patent infringed and likely valid. The FRAND part was discussed behind closed doors, but Apple would be the first defendant in a Mannheim or Munich SEP case in the post-Sisvel v. Haier era to be deemed a willing licensee.

A FRAND trial in the Eastern District of Texas will start on Monday, and it won't be easy for Apple to persuade the jury that the royalties it pays to Qualcomm should be ignored.

The United States International Trade Commission (USITC, or just ITC) will also hold an Apple v. Ericsson trial starting next week. Apple is seeking a U.S. import ban on Ericsson's base stations. Whether that would actually happen and (should it happen) make an impact is questionable. The ITC staff opposes an untailored import ban (while Apple even opposes telecommunications carriers's right to repair). Yesterday a public redacted version of an Ericsson filing with the ITC became available, and it states that "[t]he vast majority of the Accused [Ericsson] Products are manufactured and assembled in the United States from [REDACTED] of individually imported components." Apple's strategy is to "[rely] on indirect infringement allegations to demonstrate a violation through Ericsson’s imported components."

While the first Ericsson v. Apple injunction is just a matter of time, it looks like Apple can't easily find patents in its portfolio that can do damage to Ericsson's business. And Ericsson is a lot smaller than Apple anyway, especially in unit volumes, which means its exposure to patent assertions is dwarfed by Apple's.

The dispute is now entering a very interesting stage, and Apple has just suffered a setback in the form of the rejection of its Mannheim countersuit.

Monday, November 28, 2022

Ericsson seeks U.S. discovery from Broadcom for use in Apple UK patent litigation involving WiFi chips: Northern District of California

Black Friday was not a very eventful day in U.S. patent and antitrust litigation, but the courts were open for business and Ericsson filed a § 1782 discovery motion with the United States District Court for the Northern District of California:

Ex Parte Application of Telefonaktiebolaget L.M. Ericsson for an Order Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782 Granting Leave to Obtain Discovery From Broadcom Corporation for Use in a Foreign Proceeding

This motion for a subpoena is related to an Ericsson v. Apple patent infringement case pending in the High Court of Justice in London. The infringement action was discovered in June (claim no. HP-2022-000013). From the U.S. court filing I've learned that the two patents-in-suit asserted in that UK complaint are EP1721324 on a "method and inductor layout for reduced vco coupling" and EP2220848 on "mobile access to internet-based application with reduced polling. The discovery motion in California is only about EP'324, which is a member of the same patent family as U.S. Patent No. 7,151,430, which I identified as "[t]he most interesting patent-in-suit [remaining] in [ITC] investigation [no. 337-TA-1300]."

The amended particulars of the UK infringement claim state the following:

"The claim for infringement of EP 324 is made in respect of all Apple branded handsets / user equipment / mobile devices that incorporate the Broadcom 'BCM 4387' chip, the Broadcom 'BCM 4378' chip or the Apple 'TMIR36' chip (the '324 Devices')."

Originally, Ericsson listed the iPhone SE, iPhone 13, and Apple Watch Series 7 as exemplary accused devices. Ericsson's UK filing alleges that the iPhone 14 and the Apple Watch Series 8 also infringe EP'324 ("in addition to other later Apple branded devices such as iPhone 14 and Apple Watch Series 8 which it is inferred are also 324 Devices").

Given that Broadcom was already subjected to discovery due to the ITC investigation over a U.S. member of that patent family, the burden on Broadcom is minimal. It's all just about enabling the UK court to see the evidence.

One can deduce from Ericsson's discovery motion that a credible infringement case can be made against Apple gadgets that incorporate a Broadcom WiFi chip, which means the ITC trial (that evidentiary hearing will take place early next year) should get interesting. It seems that the same chip also supports Bluetooth, but that fact does not appear to give rise to infringement allegations here.

Tomorrow the Mannheim Regional Court will render judgment on an Apple countersuit against Ericsson, and the next day the Munich I Regional Court's 21st Civil Chamber will hold two Ericsson v. Apple hearings. Last week's Munich hearings were canceled as someone called in sick, a fact that I mentioned at the end of a recent post that was mostly about an interesting position taken by the ITC staff on public interest concerns surrounding a countercomplaint by Apple over mmWave patents. Next week, both a FRAND trial in the Eastern District of Texas and an ITC trial in the mmWave case I just mentioned will kick off. Later that month (December 21 to be precise), the Munich I Regional Court will hold an Ericsson v Apple FRAND hearing.

Friday, October 28, 2022

Huawei enforcing WiFi (partly WiFi 6) patents against Netgear and its German competitor AVM in Dusseldorf and Munich

A few days after a media report revealed patent infringement litigation by Huawei against Amazon (presumptively over Amazon's WiFi devices Kindle and Echo), I haven't been able to find out more about that dispute, but as a side effect of my research efforts, two German courts have officially confirmed the pendency of patent infringement actions brought by Huawei against other parties: WiFi router makers Netgear and AVM. The latter is more of a local player, but according to Wikipedia, AVM's FRITZ!Box has a 68% market share in Germany.

This is the information I've obtained from the courts:

  • Dusseldorf Regional Court:

    There are Huawei v. Netgear cases with case numbers 4c O 8/22 and 4c O 9/22, both of which will go to trial on March 21, 2023 (Presiding Judge: Sabine Klepsch). The patents-in-suit are EP3337077 on a "wireless local area network information transmission method and apparatus" and EP3143741 on a "method and transmitter for orthogonal frequency division multiple access (ofdma) resource allocation." At least one of them appears to read specifically on WiFi 6.

  • Munich I Regional Court:

I'm surprised that companies like Amazon, AVM, and Netgear--all of which have been making WiFi products for a long time--aren't licensed to what according to certain statistics is the largest and most valuable WiFi 6 patent portfolio. Huawei is a large-scale WiFi implementer at the same time, which makes it hard to imagine that its license fees would be excessive.

In the German patent infringement cases, the recent update to WiFi standard-setting organization IEEE's FRAND policy is not going to play a role. The applicable caselaw there is Sisvel v. Haier, which means Netgear and AVM are doomed to lose. Netgear and AVM realistically have no prayer with their FRAND defense and will almost certainly be deemed unwilling licensees. German courts attach no importance to the specific content of a FRAND declaration as it's all about a defendant's entitlement to a compulsory license under antitrust law. In any event, Huawei is one of the numerous major WiFi 6 contributors I listed earlier this year as companies that declined to provide Letters of Assurance under the IEEE's previous, exceedingly implementer-friendly patent policy.

Wednesday, October 26, 2022

Huawei suing Amazon over patent infringement: first hearing to take place in China on December 8

At a corporate presentation in June, Huawei emphasized that it would always seek to strike a reasonable balance between product business and patent licensing interests. It's like a law of nature in patent licensing, however, that patent holders have to enforce at times. Most license agreements happen without any litigation--but it doesn't always work that way.

The TechGoing website now reports that Huawei is suing Amazon over an alleged patent infringement and that the Suzhou Intermediate People's Court in the Chinese Province of Jiangsu will hold a hearing on December 8.

The report doesn't state the patent(s)-in-suit. It would be totally out of character for Huawei to sue Amazon over some third party's products that it's reselling. That's why it must be about Amazon's own products. There is only one obvious overlap between Huawei's patent portfolio and Amazon's devices: WiFi (IEEE 802.11), which is implemented by Amazon's Kindle e-readers and Echo smart speakers. Amazon tried to succeed in smartphones, but couldn't succeed with its Android fork (as it told the Competition Commission of India), so I doubt that cellular standard-essential patents are being asserted against Amazon.

I'm surprised that Huawei felt forced to go to court against Amazon, and I'll try to find out more about this new dispute between two technology industry giants.

Friday, September 30, 2022

IEEE rejoins mainstream of standard-setting world as it undoes key elements of 2015 patent policy that encouraged hold-out by unwilling licensees: major defeat for Apple and its allies

Rationality and pragmatism have prevailed, and unity--within the universe of standard-setting organizations--has been restored. The IEEE Standards Association Board of Governors (IEEE SA BOG) just announced an update to its patent policy, which will formally enter into force on New Year's Day.

These are the key take-aways:

Tuesday, June 21, 2022

Mannheim court grants Nokia patent injunction against OPPO and OnePlus over WiFi-related but non-standard-essential patent; Nokia mentions withdrawal of Russian cases

Nokia has obtained a first patent injunction against OPPO and its OnePlus premium brand. At 10:30 AM local time, the Mannheim Regional Court's Second Civil Chamber (Presiding Judge: Dr. Holger Kircher) announced its decision in case no. 2 O 74/21. I haven't received confirmation from the court, but Nokia has kept with its long-standing tradition of issuing rapid-response statements on court rulings and announced that the court has found for Nokia and ordered an injunction. A Nokia spokesperson said the following:

"We welcome the Court’s decision. The judgment confirms the strength of Nokia’s leading patent portfolio. We have conducted our negotiations in a fair way and hope that OPPO will now accept its obligations and, like its competitors, renew their license on fair terms, rather than continue to operate without one. It would be better for both parties to spend their time and money on innovating rather than fighting in court."

While I don't doubt that Nokia's patent portfolio as a whole is strong, this particular patent--EP1704731 on a "method and apparatus for indicating service set identifiers to probe for"-- comes down to saying that if a WiFi network broadcasts messages to indicate its presence, a device shouldn't send messages asking the network whether it's available, and suggests the only obvious solution, which is to keep a list of networks and a flag (or whatever other data point) for whether network proactively makes its presence felt. I'm sure only a minuscule part of the tens of billions of dollars spent on wireless R&D since the time the claimed "invention" was made relates to that particular "innovation."

What OPPO and OnePlus can request now is an emergency stay of the injunction, in which case the Germany-wide injunction wouldn't get enforced until at least the end of the appellate proceedings. OPPO and OnePlus can--and I venture to guess will--appeal today's decision to the Oberlandesgericht Karlsruhe (Karlsruhe Higher Regional Court). The Sixth Civil Senate under Presiding Judge Andreas Voss ("Voß" in German) will then base its decision on a motion for an immediate stay on a preliminary assessment of the likelihood of a successful appeal. If OPPO and OnePlus can present prior art that clearly anticipated the claimed invention, the injunction might be stayed before it is enforced. The first decision for the appeals court to make is whether to stay enforcement while it will be weighing a stay during the entire appellate proceedings.

This was a clear bet on the German "injunction gap." However, I've repeatedly seen German patent injuncions stayed by the appeals courts based on strong invalidity contentions.

If the injunction can be enforced during the appeal, the security to be provided by Nokia (a bond or a deposit) will amount to €300K (approximately $315K) with respect to OnePlus and €580K (approximately $610K) for OPPO.

It should be possible to work around that patent. What I don't know is what the logistical implications of a workaround would be (changing the software should be easy, but if any hardware change was needed, it would be more costly).

As for Nokia's position on fairness, the patent underlying today's injunction is not standard-essential. Therefore, it is not subject to a FRAND (fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory) licensing commitment. But other patents-in-suit are standard-essential patents (SEPs), with another Nokia v. OPPO Mannheim case involving a SEP and coming to judgment in two weeks from today. Should Nokia prevail on the technical merits of that 4G SEP, the court will have to address OPPO's FRAND defense. Whether proportionality played a role in today's decision isn't known, but more than a year since the German parliament enacted a "reform" bill with a modified patent injunction statute, there hasn't been a single case in which an injunction was denied as disproportionate, and I doubt we'll see such a case anytime soon.

What makes the FRAND aspect of Nokia v. OPPO particularly interesting is that OPPO itself is a major patent holder (which even filed more patent applications with the European Patent Office in the field of digital communications last year than its adversary) and has brought some countersuits such as a 5G SEP case that the Munich I Regional Court recently heard. So it's a two-way dispute, though OPPO's unit volumes with its handsets are obviously far larger than those of Nokia's base stations.

It became known today that Nokia withdrew its Russian case against OPPO due to the Ukraine situation, but as this blog reported, Nokia recently filed new cases in Finland and Sweden. In China, there is a FRAND rate-setting case pending, and (as the post I just linked to mentions) China's antitrust authority has sent a questionnaire to major SEP holders including--but not limited to--Nokia.

So at this stage, the complete list of jurisdictions in which Nokia is currently asserting patents against OPPO is the following: Germany, UK, Spain, France, China, India, Indonesia, the Netherlands, Finland, and Sweden. That's a total of ten countries--four more than at this stage of the Ericsson v. Apple dispute, the enforcement part of which started more than six months later (the parties previously filed FRAND--but not infringement--cases).

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Thursday, June 2, 2022

Mannheim court throws out Deutsche Telekom 'antitrust' action against IPCom, schedules Nokia v. OPPO decision for June 21

After a Dusseldorf complaint against Samsung over Android's prediction of remaining battery runtime and a couple of Munich standard-essential patent (SEP) complaints against car makers Nissan and Fiat Chrysler, there's also news--even two distinct items--from the Mannheim Regional Court:

  • As expected, Deutsche Telekom's so-called antitrust complaint against IPCom was thrown out on Tuesday. I attended the trial last year and there were any number of reasons to reach that conclusion as a matter of law, and the factual allegations--some of which seemed implausible--weren't even reached.

    IPCom congratulated its outside legal team. The lead trial counsel was Quinn Emanuel's Jérôme Kommer, and one of the attorneys who represented IPCom in its infringement actions, Hengeler Mueller's Dr. Wolfgang Kellenter, also contributed to the effort.

    Given that the parties had settled a U.S. patent infringement case (in which the defendant was Deutsche Telekom subsidiary Sprint) but not this case, it's a given that Deutsche Telekom will appeal. It's what a deep-pocketed large corporation can afford, even if only to delay the inevitable, which is the definitive disposition of the case. This is a dead lawsuit walking, but until it's res iudicata, IPCom will have to live with the totally theoretical risk it poses.

    Presumably the appeal will be heard by the Karlsruhe Higher Regional Court's Sixth Civil Senate under Presiding Judge Andreas Voss ("Voß" in German). I remember him and his sense of humor from his days on the Mannheim court, and the case is laughable. The appellate hearing should have great entertainment value.

  • Also on Tuesday, the same division of the court--the Second Civil Chamber und Presiding Judge Dr. Holger Kircher--heard a Nokia v. OPPO non-SEP case. The patent-in-suit's "teaching" boils down to this: if there's a WiFi network that broadcasts messages so you know it's available, don't broadcast your own message to ask whether it is around. Nokia undoubtedly makes legitimate inventions all the time, but this isn't one of them. It's a typical "German gamble" hoping that an injunction will issue and become enforceable during the injunction gap, i.e., before the patent gets invalidated.

    I don't know what happened at the trial, but it's interesting that the subsequent decision will be announced on June 21. Three weeks from trial to ruling is unusually short for German patent infringement cases; the median is probably somewhere between six and eight weeks. But the patent is extremely simple (which is also reflected--though not conclusively evidenced--by the fact that it's only a nine-page document). So whichever way the court may want to decide the case, it won't be a lot of work compared to the average patent infringement ruling.

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Monday, May 30, 2022

Nokia placing transparent bet on German injunction gap with non-standard-essential WiFi patent against OPPO in Mannheim

Tomorrow (Tuesday, May 31) the Mannheim Regional Court's Second Civil Chamber (Presiding Judge: Dr. Holger Kircher) will hold its second Nokia v. OPPO trial. As I already reported last summer, the patent-in-suit in case no. 2 O 73/21 is EP1704731 on a "method and apparatus for indicating service set identifiers to probe for." I was clear all along that it's a WiFi patent. What I have meanwhile researched is that this patent hasn't been declared essential to WiFi (IEEE 802.11).

On the first of this month I expressed skepticism regarding the impact of the new Art. 83 of the German Patent Act, which calls on the Federal Patent Court to provide a preliminary summary of the issues in a nullity case within six months of service of the complaint. It's illusory to expect the court to reach a preliminary conclusion after six months on virtually 100% of all challenged patents when it so far needs years to form such an opinion in only about half of all cases. However, in some outlier situations such as tomorrow's Mannheim case (to which the new rule doesn't apply; it only affects cases filed this month or later) the Federal Patent Court would indeed be able to tell quickly and easily that a patent has serious validity issues.

I want to be clear and fair: Nokia has invested, and continues to invest, a lot in innovation. The company deserves respect for that, and respect for IP ultimately means royalty payments. But this doesn't mean that Nokia wouldn't also take an opportunistic win over a patent that is rather unreflective of its substantial investments in innovation. EP'731 is the technically thinnest European patent I've ever seen in litigation, even less technical than a patent Qualcomm asserted against Apple's Spotlight search in Munich (a fitting analogy as Qualcomm is one of the most innovative companies in the entire technology sector, yet sought leverage from partly underwhelming patents).

The number one reason why true innovators like Qualcomm and Nokia resort to patent assertions of that kind is that Germany's bifurcated patent litigation system and the "injunction gap" it entails encourages deep-pocketed plaintiffs to just play the lottery. The "German gamble" is that you assert--additionally or alternatively to more serious patents--a bunch of patents that should never have been granted in the first place. The hit rate may be low, but if you prevail on one or two such patents, you may get leverage--and, at a minimum, a news cycle about your adversary using your "intellectual property" without a license.

While we're on the subject of "intellectual", let's take a look at what that patent is all about. Obviously a page count alone doesn't answer the question. Sometimes an incredibly good idea can be described briefly. Here, however, even nine pages is epic when considering what the claimed invention amounts to:

In a nutshell, some WiFi networks identify themselves proactively by broadcasting an "I'm here" message while some others will only respond if a device asks "are you [stating a specific network name] around?"--and what the patent "teaches" is that you shouldn't ask that "are you around?" question with respect to a network that proactively tells you "I'm here" (just with respect to those that wait to be asked).

The alleged technical effect is that you save bandwith and power by not asking unnecessary questions. In light of worldwide efforts to combat climate change, energy efficiency is undoubtedly relevant. However, the starting point--"don't ask if it tells you anyway"--is obvious, and what's also obvious is that a device would use a "flag" (which is typically a 0/1 binary value). It would be a different story if this patent taught a particularly efficient way of doing this. But what it does is to cover all implementations. It says: use a binary flag, or some other data point--just store the information that a certain WiFi network will identify itself and doesn't have to be asked.

In light of how unbelievably uninventive that patent is, I'm not going to attend the Mannheim trial. The Nokia v. OPPO/OPPO v. Nokia dispute is generally very interesting. For instance, Nokia's EP'103 was successfully asserted against Daimler, though OPPO has dug up an Excel table that is part of the specification of the standard and, in my view, renders the patent non-essential. Whether or not I'm right about non-essentiality, EP'103 is a patent to be reckoned with. Also, an OPPO patent that is being asserted against Nokia in Munich was described as a groundbreaking innovation that enables low-latency 5G network communications. By comparison, I very strongly doubt that there will ever be an injunction against any defendant over EP'731. It's a lottery ticket, and even if it worked out, it could be worked around by simply checking for the presence of all WiFi networks on the list, even those that self-identify. That workaround would result in unnecessary carbon emissions--and there might be some logistical challenges if a chipset had to be replaced with a modified one. But it could be done.

The odds are long against this lottery ticket winning Nokia the jackpot, especially before judges that have a pretty good feel for what constitutes true innovation. I was really impressed with how easily Judge Dr. Kircher identified the non-technical nature of Qualcomm's "amended" claims of a patent relating to electromigration. That Qualcomm patent was actually rocket science compared to EP'731...

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Thursday, May 12, 2022

Apple and other WiFi implementers pressuring IEEE not to abandon its 2015 patent policy--but serious impact of negative Letters of Assurance can't be denied

Early last week, largely the same Apple-led crowd that is behind the "Save Our Standards" campaign (whose deceptive lobbying I've recently called out) sent a letter to Sophia Muirhead, the General Counsel of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). I'm in possession of that six-page PDF, which is dated May 3 and entitled Industry and Public Interest Support for Maintaining 2015 IEEE-SA Bylaw Updates. It's a pressure group effort ahead of a (fairly confidential) meeting of the IEEE-SA's Standards Board; the letter was allegedly authored by outside counsel for Apple; and from what I heard, it's more or less unprecedented for industry players to lobby the IEEE in that fashion.

It looks like some folks are panicking, though a little over a year ago they had reason to celebrate: the Biden DOJ silently downgraded a letter that the Trump DOJ (specifically, then-Assistant Attorney General for the Antitrust Division, Makan Delrahim) had sent to IEEE, urging it to undo significant parts of its 2015 policy change favoring implementers. As I noted at the end of the post I just linked to, the wrangling over IEEE's standard-essential patent (SEP) policy was sure to continue. Mr. Delrahim is now a Latham & Watkins partner (oddly, a firm frequently used by Apple), so he's no longer in a position to push IEEE in the direction he outlined while in public office. But IEEE still has a problem on its hands that no one with an interest in a functioning standard-setting system can responsibly ignore or convincingly explain away.

We'd be having a totally different conversation now if the following sentence from the first paragraph of Apple et al.'s letter were true:

"The IEEE-SA’s Patent Policy is and remains the model for standard setting organization (SSO) IPR policies, particularly following the 2015 update to the patent policy."

The letter says "IEEE-SA distinguished itself positively" in 2015. Now, if SSOs like ETSI had gone in a similar direction, Apple et al. would be in a position to make that claim of IEEE's 2015 policy being and remaining "the model for [SSO] IPR policies." But the reality--certainly a sad one from the implementers' perspective--is that seven years on, IEEE is still an outlier among SSOs. That may simply be due to the fact that other SSOs are more consensus-driven than IEEE, where a majority can just brush aside objections no matter their merit.

Neither does the last sentence of the first paragraph withstand scrutiny once one looks at the broader picture:

"By almost any measure, standardization work at IEEE has thrived in the wake of these updates."

Via a footnote, that sentence refers to a 2018 IPlytics report (PDF) that says "contributions to IEEE standards and technical work within IEEE working groups have only increased since the updated patent policy was approved." But as standards grow more complex, the number of contributions are on the rise--and more than anything, that conclusion reflects a disconnect:

A number of major wireless SEP holders and innovators (including, but not necessarily limited to, Ericsson, GE, Huawei (notably, a large-scale WiFi implementer as well), InterDigital, LG, Nokia, Orange, Panasonic, and Qualcomm (in alphabetical order)) have declined to provide Letters of Assurance ("LOAs") that would force them to adhere to the IEEE's 2015 policy. Some if not all of them clarified that they remained willing to abide by the prior policy (which was more similar to what is still found in the cellular standards space). But a refusal to be bound by the new policy is deemed a "negative LOA," regardless of a contributor's stance on a superseded version of that policy.

The disconnect here is that there wasn't a major disruption on the technical side (though Professor Ron Katznelson, a member and past Chair of the IEEE's U.S. IP committee, did identify some negative impact in his paper The IEEE controversial policy on Standard Essential Patents -- the empirical record since adoption) despite those negative LOAs. That approach is not sustainable. Sooner or later, an SSO runs into a serious problem if a significant part of all technical contributions isn't subject to positive LOAs.

We're talking about a legal issue, a licensing problem--not just a political one that may simply be solved by an Administration overriding its predecessor's policies.

Unlike in politics, where a majority vote is often the answer, that won't work here either. Apple et al.'s letter stresses that there are far more companies favoring implementer-friendly policies than a proposal to revert to the previous one. That means nothing. Seriously, there are more people out there buying bread than owning or working at bakeries, yet customers can't just set the terms on which they want the supply side of the market to do business with them. The fact that there are so many implementers makes successful standards valuable. It doesn't devalue them. And even if a vast majority of SEP holders preferred a policy (typically because they are net licensees), in the end implementers need a license to all the SEPs, not just some or most of them.

WiFi 6 is the first generation of IEEE 802.11 to have been affected by negative LOAs. WiFi 7, which is now in the works, will be the first one to have been developed with some companies having submitted negative LOAs at the outset.

Those negative LOAs--coupled with the continuation of standards development as if nothing had changed--are a ticking time bomb. Arguably, it has detonated in some places already. IEEE ran into problems with the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) finding itself unable to approve as national U.S. standards those IEEE standards that were clearly impacted by negative LOAs. The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) has similar problems according to a JDSupra article and a LinkedIn article (both by the same author, David Cohen)). It's not a question of whether those organizations like IEEE's patent policy: it's all about the fact that there are negative LOAs in place, normally a no-go in standard-setting, for good reason.

The current situation is a mess. Contrary to what Apple et al.'s letter claims (asking this rhetorical question: "Why would IEEE-SA want to return to a world in which the cost of implementing IEEE-SA standards like 802.11 was uncertain, inevitably discouraging adoption?", negative LOAs are anything but a path to legal certainty. That is not a question of whether or not one would like to bring down SEP royalties. Apple et al.'s letter fails to present a solution as it only advocates perpetuating the problem. With Apple's annual litigation budget in the billions of dollars, that may be workable. For the technology industry at large it is not.

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Friday, April 16, 2021

DOJ downgrades Delrahim letter to IEEE on standard-essential patents: inter-agency rapprochement with FTC on SEP enforcement?

The language of diplomacy and other governmental communications is very nuanced, like the British Queen's spokespersons saying she's "not amused" when she's actually outraged. The Antitrust Division of the United States Department of Justice ("DOJ-ATR") has taken this concept to a higher level. In what could be described as a digital form of body language, the Biden Administration's DOJ has unequivocally dissociated itself from the Trump Administration's position on standard-essential patent (SEP) enforcement without saying or writing a single word: just by relegating a link to a document (with the PDF remaining in the same place as before) to a long list of links that is, for the most part, merely an archive. Parts of that archive are little more than the dustbin of DOJ-ATR history.

Look at it this way: if a colleague of yours had a picture of her sweetheart on his desk, but all of a sudden decided to put it into a dark storage room, wouldn't that tell you something?

On September 10, 2020, less than two months before the election Donald Trump lost, Qualcomm-aligned Antitrust Assistant Attorney General Makan Delrahim tried to use his remaining time in office--he was going to leave anyway, and he knew what the polls said--tried to deal one final blow to net licensees of SEPs. He supplemented, updated, and appended the DOJ-ATR's 2015 Business Review Letter (BRL) to the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). An IEEE standard all of us use in our everyday lives is WiFi (IEEE 802.11). IEEE has been a strategically important forum at the forefront of how standard-setting organizations could set more specific rules governing SEP enforcement than, for example, ETSI, whose FRAND pledges (which must be interpreted under French law wherever in the world they are enforced) come with a lack of clarity that is fully intended (though some interpretations are still clearly less reasonable than others).

Mr. Delrahim's BRL 2.0 was meant to make the IEEE change course by giving companies like Qualcomm--which in all fairness is a tremendous WiFi innovator--ammunition for IEEE-internal discussions. Qualcomm executives publicly predicted on various occasions that the IEEE was going to make its rules more patentee-friendly under pressure from the federal government. Last month, MLex's Khushita Vasant reported on a recent clash between Qualcomm, Apple, Huawei, and other companies at an IEEE patent policy meeting. It was a clash between the progressives like Apple--who wanted to continue on the path of setting implementer-friendly rules--and those seeking a revision, led by Qualcomm.

What I mentioned at the start of this post obviously doesn't apply to the Trump Administration. Mr. Delrahim's letter to IEEE suggested that the Obama Administration's 2015 BRL to IEEE had been misinterpreted. But Mr. Delrahim also disparaged his predecessor's work by claiming that "[t]he Department's assessment in 2015 of the 'direction' of U.S. law interpreting FRAND commitments on royalty rates and damages assessments was not well-supported and has not proven accurate."

In late March, I was wondering whether the DOJ and the FTC would continue to fundamentally disagree on the application of antitrust law to SEP abuse, given that the FTC didn't seek a Supreme Court review of the Ninth Circuit's FTC v. Qualcomm ruling and mentioned its coordination with the DOJ. But that was just a question, not speculation. Also, the Solicitor General would have had to represent the FTC before the Supreme court, not DOJ-ATR.

Apparently, the Biden Administration is inclined to undo at least some of Mr. Delrahim's SEP policy initiatives. The full extent will become clearer with time. But it's already certain that change has come to DOJ-ATR.

Currently, DOJ-ATR is being run by Acting Assistant Attorney General Richard Powers. Just like we've recently seen quadruple-antisuit injunctions, which I abbreviate as A4SIs and others as AAAASIs, Mr. Powers has a quadruple-A title: he's the Antitrust Acting Assistant Attorney General. What an alphabet soup.

Mr. Powers could have done his own "update" to the 2020 Delrahim letter. That update could simply have stated that the 2020 letter was an aberration, and the 2015 letter was in full force and effect again. But doing so would have required a communication style closer to that of the Trump Administration.

That's where the hierarchical structure of the DOJ-ATR website came in handy. There's one section where one can find the currently valid BRLs. From that one, Mr. Delrahim's letter has been silently removed. His letter to the Avanci patent pool is still there, and it remains to be seen what--if anything--will change in that context. But the 2020 IEEE letter is no longer there. The 2015 BRL to IEEE can still be found on that page. That makes it the one that currently counts.

The original and now-restored BRL tends to strengthen those favoring component-level SEP licensing.

The Delrahim letter to IEEE is now on the page listing "comments to state and other organizations". That page is hidden deep down in the hierarchical structure of the DOJ-ATR website. The dark storage room I mentioned further above.

This move has been clearly interpreted by the tech industry. Cisco's Senior Director, Antitrust and Competition, Gil Ohana, replied to a tweet of mine that this marked the "end of an error":

A nice wordplay. Few people in California would refer to the Trump years as an "era" not only because #45's reelection bid failed but also for substantive reasons.

But let's also be realistic that there'll be a lof of wrangling over SEP issue now. The downgrade of the Delrahim letter to IEEE is a significant first step.

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Monday, March 22, 2021

Caltech seeks to extend billion-dollar patent win over Apple, Broadcom to Microsoft: new lawsuit in Western District of Texas over Surface, Xbox

According to a patent infringement complaint filed on Friday, Microsoft--famously headquartered in Redmond, WA--has offices at 10900 Stonelake Boulevard, Austin, TX, USA 78759 and 401 East Sonterra Boulevard, San Antonio, TX. Those offices don't seem to be very large, but the per-square-foot cost of doing business there could be staggering: both these places are in the Western District of Texas, the most attractive venue for U.S. patent plaintiffs even ahead of the Eastern District of the same state.

The Western District has displaced the Eastern District. Waco-based Judge Alan Albright is no less patentee-friendly (an understatement) than Judge Gilstrap, but many major tech companies from the West Coast have additional operations in the Austin area, while the Eastern District is rural and easy to avoid. For example, you won't find any Apple Store in the Eastern District by now (though some are just across the border of the federal judiciary district). A certain presence by a defendant is, however, what it makes it easy for patent plaintiffs to avoid that their cases get transferred out of their chosen district under the Supreme Court's TC Heartland case law (PDF).

The California Institute of Technology ("Caltech") is now suing Microsoft in Waco, claiming that the Microsoft Surface portable computers and the Xbox gaming console infringe a handful of WiFi-related--but apparently not standard-essential--patents (this post continues below the document):

21-03-19 Caltech v. Microso... by Florian Mueller

The Caltech v. Microsoft complaint immediately brings two spectacular (or, from the perspective of true innovators, shocking) patent damages verdicts to mind:

Caltech is trying to get the best of both worlds: while leveraging its victory in L.A. (though I wish Apple and Broadcom luck on appeal and don't expect the verdict to be upheld, at least not in full), Caltech transparently attempts to benefit from the Waco patent bonanza.

Caltech is being represented by Quinn Emanuel and a small local firm, Mann Tindel Thompson. Quinn Emanuel is more often seen representing plaintiffs against Apple than against Microsoft, but this blog reported on various cases in which QE worked for Motorola against Microsoft, including the case in which Judge Robart's famous antisuit injunction came down.

I'll follow developments in the Western District more closely now, given that it's the world's #1 hotspot for patent damages just like Munich is the world's #1 venue for patent injunctions.

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Thursday, November 12, 2020

Two more weeks until the single most important court ruling in the (short) history of the IoT industry: component-level SEP licensing

Originally, the Dusseldorf Regional Court had scheduled its Nokia v. Daimler ruling (with implications for a spin-off from that case, the Huawei v. Nokia case that resulted from the severance of Huawei's third-party counterclaims) for today. But for court-internal reasons, the ruling date has been pushed back by two weeks.

The Internet of Things industry should pay close attention on November 26, 2020. No judicial decision to date has been of comparable importance to the "I" in "IoT."

There's no IoT without an Internet connection. Apart from a small subset of IoT devices that will be just fine with a BlueTooth connection, some kind of WiFi or cellular (such as 4G/LTE) connectivity is a hard requirement. That's where you have to deal with thousands of allegedly standard-essential patents (SEPs)--a challenge even for large and sophisticated organizations, and nothing short of a nightmare for small and medium-sized IoT companies, especially startups.

At a Brussels conference I organized about a year ago, young and innovative IoT companies like AirTies (from Turkey) and Kamstrup (from Denmark) discussed the problem of SEP licensing from their perspective. The problem they face is that SEP holders (particularly trolls, of which are many--and they get fed with patents by the likes of Nokia and Ericsson) are at least as unwilling to extend exhaustive component-level SEP licenses to the IoT industry's suppliers as they are in the automotive context. Their calculus is always that they can maximize their leverage by going after end-product makers, such as companies that produce smart meters (such as Kamstrup). They make outrageous demands, sometimes listing dozens or even hundreds of patents that one can relatively easily identify as being technologically unrelated to the standard they claim they're essential to.

A defendant like Daimler can afford to be defended by a world-class litigation like Quinn Emanuel--and nevertheless got hit by four SEP injunctions just over these past few months. The average IoT company can only dream of hiring QE, and will find it hard to pay even for the initial analysis (not even in-depth!) of claim charts. Actually, they might not even be provided with claim charts as the Federal Court of Justice of Germany abolished that requirement this year in Sisvel v. Haier (contrary to how the Court of Justice of the EU's Huawei v. ZTE guidance should be applied)...

It's simply a fact that IoT startups can't handle SEP licensing themselves, so their suppliers (such as baseband chipset makers) must do the job and then provide a fully-licensed product. That's what patent exhaustion is all about.

The Dusseldorf court's widely expected referral to the CJEU of key legal questions related to component-level SEP licensing can be a game changer to the benefit of the IoT industry. It doesn't matter that Nokia v. Daimler is an automotive case. While it's not incorrect to refer to that kind of dispute as a "connected vehicle case," Nokia's SEPs aren't specific to self-driving cars or collision prevention. It's basic wireless communications technology. The legal questions are the same, but the problem is an even more pressing one for the IoT sector.

I've quickly drawn up a couple of charts to explain how the IoT industry's SEP licensing problems relate to those of the automotive sector. This is particularly important with a view to a Berlin roundtable next week to discuss a Qualcomm proposal that I believe neither the European Commission nor the German government can support without throwing IoT under the bus.

In a nutshell, Qualcomm, Nokia, and other SEP holders pursuing similar licensing tactics would still prefer to license their patents only at the end-product level (i.e., to Daimler, Volkswagen etc.), but not least with a view to the Dusseldorf court's upcoming referral to the CJEU they're now talking about tier 1: the automotive industry's direct suppliers. Telematics control units (TCUs) are tier 1 products from the automotive industry's perspective (the higher the number, the higher up in the supply chain). TCUs contain network access devices (NADs; tier 2), and those rely on a baseband chipset (tier 3). Here's the "nesting" of one product inside another as a simple chart (click on the image to enlarge; thist post continues below the image):

Baseband chipsets are relevant to the automotive industry just like they are to IoT products with cellular connectivity. At the level of the NAD (automotive tier 2), however, there's already some differentiation: NADs designed to be used in cars come with certain automotive-specific functionality that no IoT product needs. And TCUs are definitely just an automotive thing. It wouldn't be an economical choice to incorporate TCUs into non-automotive IoT products, and it would be a waste of space (on top of money).

This second chart shows three scenarios: two types of IoT products (with and without NADs, but again, NADs for IoT are not the same as NADs for cars), and the automotive supply chain (click on the image to enlarge; this post continues below the image):

For the reasons explained further above, end-product licensing is absolutely not a viable option for small and medium-sized IoT companies. And as the above chart shows, TCU-level licensing (tier 1) as proposed by Nokia this fall and, as I mentioned, by Qualcomm wouldn't work either. At a minimum, licenses would have to be available at the NAD level, and then the royalty would have to be commensurate with what a patented invention adds to the commercial value of that component as opposed to that of the end product.

If the top EU court holds that all levels of the supply chain are entitled to an exhaustive component-level license on FRAND terms, the problem will be solved for IoT, at least in the European market with potential repercussions around the globe.

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Thursday, January 30, 2020

Over WiFi-related patents, L.A. jury awards Caltech $838 million from Apple, $270 million from Broadcom

A Los Angeles jury just awarded the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) $838 million from Apple and $270 million from Broadcom--a total of approximately $1.1 billion--over patents related to the WiFi standard (IEEE 802.11).

WiFi is just a limited part of the technology in a smartphone, and there are numerous patents allegedly essential to that standard as well as non-essential patents with some connection to WiFi. It wouldn't be possible to profitably make phones if one extrapolated a royalty of $1.40 per iPhone--which appears to have been the outcome--to the totality of patents potentially implemented in such a highly complex and multifunctional device.

Based on the complaint as well as Apple and Broadcom's answer to the complaint, I haven't found an indication that the patents are subject to a FRAND licensing commitment. They might cover efficiency gains related to the actual implementation of the standard. I'll update this post, or do a follow-up post, once I've found out.

This is the biggest WiFi damages verdict to my knowledge. Apple and Broadcom have announced their intent to appeal, so we'll see how much of that amount is ultimately awarded. Those verdicts tend to get slashed later on.

The verdict form isn't available on the docket (case no. 2:16-cv-03714, Central District of California) yet.

In jury trials, but not on appeal, university trolls have two psychological advantages over other patent trolls:

  • While conventional trolls have to come up with creative names like "American [Insert Something] Innovations," jurors intuitively associate universities with research and inventiveness.

  • They can claim to pursue a greater good, as opposed to those greedy corporations infringing their patents, as if those university trolls were Robin Hood's patent-related equivalent.

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Tuesday, November 5, 2019

Call for input: do you know of any cases in the PC industry in which SEP holders refused to license component makers or based their royalties on the end product?

What you find in the headline is not meant to be a rhetorical question. While I'm personally unaware of any case in the personal computer industry (with just one exception that I'll state in a moment) in which a standard-essential patent (SEP) holder insisted on the end product (desktop computer or laptop) being the royalty base and/or refused to grant an exhaustive license to component makers, I can't rule out that there have been such cases in that huge and decades-old industry. That's why I'm asking for your help. Input from readers has previously been very helpful, such as in connection with privateering (patent transfers from to non-producing entities).

My focus is on mobile devices, and I've looked at PC-related patent litigation only when countersuits targeting personal computers were brought in retaliation for mobile patent suits. In one such case, an absurd letter by Motorola Mobility to Microsoft entered the public record: Motorola wanted 2.25% per unit from Microsoft and explicitly stated that "the royalty is calculated based on the price of the end product (e.g., each Xbox 360 product, each PC/laptop, each smartphone, etc.) and not on component software (e.g., Xbox 360 system software, Windows 7 software, Windows Phone 7 software, etc.)." To put this into perspective, on most PCs that royalty rate would have been roughly at a level with Microsoft's entire income from selling a Windows OEM license. Motorola made that outlandish demand in a letter, but limited its royalty demand to 2.25% of the selling price of Windows in Judge James L. Robart's now-famous FRAND case as well as in a similar proceeding (that led nowhere before the parties withdrew all pending claims) before the Mannheim Regional Court. Motorola even denied the undeniable later on--apparently they realized they had been a bit too crazy, fortunately just temporarily.

Video codec patents are one example of a category of SEPs for which patentees could theoretically have insisted that the royalty base should be the end product. Graphics and memory standards are another example.

What about WiFi? All I know is that I've bought WiFi cards for several desktop PCs in a row, just because it's always a nice fallback when there's an issue with a landline or a router. I can just get a connection via a smartphone with tethering--and in many places, other options exist. Obviously, when I bought those cards for roughly $40-50 each, there was no way any WiFi patent holder could have collected a royalty based on the total cost of the related PC. I paid my $40-50 for that component regardless of whether I plugged it into a $500 or a $5,000 computer. Apparently, the companies that made the WiFi cards I bought were fully--and exhaustively--licensed. It's the same situation when you buy an additional or larger memory chip or a new graphics adapter and just install such components yourself.

Today's smartphones are handheld PCs. If there really is no example (other than a letter Motorola distanced itself from) of SEP holders having treated the PC industry the way they're now trying to treat the mobile device and automotive industries, then that would expose the likes of Qualcomm, Nokia, and Ericsson as total outliers in the wider technology industry.

In case you do know of any cases, please fill out the contact form. I protect my sources unless you request--in writing--to be named. What I'm primarily looking for is verifiable information, such as publicly accessible court filings. If you have unverifiable information that you nevertheless consider highly pertinent, please let me know, too--but I may then have to follow up with you to get a better idea.

Thanks in advance for your help! I will publish the results of this call for input on this blog, in a future post.

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