journal of the licensing executives society international
Transcript
journal of the licensing executives society international
DECEMBER 2013 JOURNAL JOURNAL OF OF THE THE LICENSING LICENSING EXECUTIVES EXECUTIVES SOCIETY SOCIETY INTERNATIONAL INTERNATIONAL “A penny for their thoughts!” Maybe that’s crossed your own mind once or twice when dealing with EPO examiners and their search reports and communications? Search Matters 2014 www.epo.org/search-matters JOURNAL OF THE LICENSING EXECUTIVES SOCIETY INTERNATIONAL 3 - 4 April The Hague, The Netherlands Volume XLVIII No. 4 LES NOUVELLES Join us for the EPO’s outstanding training opportunity for patent search professionals: les Nouvelles December 2013 Advancing the Business of Intellectual Property Globally Where Are We Going in High Tech? Assessing High Tech: Observations And Patterns Annemarie Meike — Page 214 Trends And Opportunities In Semiconductor Licensing Stefan Tamme, Stephen Schott, Dogan Gunes, Jeffrey Wallace, Richard Boadway, Frank Razavi and Marc Pépin — Page 216 Trends And Observations In Software Susan O. Goldsmith, Ian G. DiBernardo, Frank L. Bernstein, Scott Smedresman, Michael Gulliford AND Richard P.W. Stobbe — Page 229 Trends In Mobile And Consumer Electronics Ram Menon and Kevin Spivak — Page 238 Samsung And LG: From Also-Rans To Dominance In Consumer Electronics Robert A. Myers— Page 246 Licensing-In From The First-To-File: The Strategy Of Filing Early Concepts As Incomplete Patent Applications James Anglehart — Page 253 Kirtsaeng v. Wiley Incentivizes Digital Distribution Ilaria Maggioni — Page 260 Introduction: The Growing Risk From Australian IP Licensing Amalia Stone — Page 263 Evolving Intellectual Property Regimes In Turkey And University Inventions: The New Article 6 Of The Patent Law And Its Impact On University Inventions Omer HIZIROGLU and Iclal ARGUC — Page 268 Phases Of Growth In University Technology Transfer Tom Hockaday — Page 275 Recent U.S. Court Decisions And Developments Affecting Licensing John Paul and Brian Kacedon — Page 280 2014 SEMINAR SERIES www.e-mergeglobal.com U.S. trademark practice Seminar SUmmer patent Seminar advanced patent & LicenSing Seminar This one week seminar is designed to provide a comprehensive overview of U.S. trademark practice. Beginning with introductory lectures on the U.S. trademark system, subject matter becomes more complex throughout the week. Our knowledgeable lecturers draw from years of experience in the trademark field and focus on real life case examples. A three and a half week seminar covering all major areas of U.S. patent law, beginning with an overview of the U.S. patent system and moving on to more complex subjects such as patent prosecution, infringement litigation, and post-grant procedures. Includes practical problems and discussion of recent cases where applicable, with a focus on how practice is changing in view of the America Invents Act (AIA). This two week seminar focuses on advanced topics in U.S. patent law and includes workshops and problem solving in order to illustrate the more advanced concepts with regard to prosecution, claim interpretation, and validity and infringement issues. Participants learn how to modify and determine the scope of a granted U.S. patent, as well as how to address significant licensing issues. JOURNAL OF Mar. THE LICENSING EXECUTIVES 31 - apr. 4, 2014 June 4 - 27, 2014 SOCIETY INTERNATIONAL Fall 2014 Infringement Monitoring We are the patent and technology research company Seminars held at BSKB’s Offices in: Metropolitan Washington, DC 8110 Gatehouse Road, Suite 100E Falls Church, VA 22042 t: 703.205.8000 | f: 703.205.8050 bskb.com | [email protected] © 2013 Birch, Stewart, Kolasch & Birch, LLP. All rights reserved. Client:of Birch, Kolasch & Birch, LLP (BSKB) We are pleased to announce the publication . .Stewart, . ContaCt: Elizabeth Richards, [email protected], 703.205.8000 Guide to Intangible Asset Valuation ae: Jeff Lupisella x225 PRojeCt: BSKB-073 ‘13 Ad Placement Run date: Oct 2013 PM: Jeff Lupisella x225 VeR. : horizontal format Mod. date: 10.23.13 Wed 1:59 PM LES Print Ad P. Schweihs 4CP: n n n n by Robert F. Reilly and Pub: Robert Size: 7” x 4.75” Confidential: Information contained within this document is only intended for the recipient. Copying, distribution or communication of this document is stricly prohibited. 13221 Woodland Park Rd., Suite 420, Herndon, VA 20171 tel 703.437.8018 fax 703.437.8268 vizual.com This 700-page book, published in 2013 by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, explores the disciplines of intangible asset analysis, economic damages, and transfer price analysis. Guide to Intangible Asset Valuation examines the economic attributes and the economic influences that create, monetize, and transfer the value of intangible assets and intellectual property. Illustrative examples are provided throughout the book, and detailed examples are presented for each generally accepted intangible asset valuation approach and method. Patent Search Services Technology/Innovation Research White Space Analysis Claim Charting/Infringement Analysis Portfolio Analysis Patent Licensing Support Services Portfolio Management Patent Due Diligence Landscaping Studies Patent Drafting Reach us Available for purchase for $122.50 plus shipping from www.willamette.com/books_intangibles.html. USA: 1-888-247-1618 India: +91-44-2231 0321 [email protected] Willamette Management Associates www.willamette.com Robert Reilly and Bob Schweihs are managing directors of Willamette Management Associates, an intangible asset and intellectual property analysis, business valuation, forensic analysis, and financial opinion firm. Assessing High Tech Assessing High Tech: Observations And Patterns By Annemarie Meike T he modern business world operates on the widely held notion that by identifying and predicting patterns in the market one can increase one’s ability to surf the waves of market success. Hence the LES (USA & Canada) High Tech Sector (HTS) has launched a multi-part series of papers on trends in its various industrial subsectors. This is just the beginning. We invite contributions internationally to the next edition of this series. A purpose of the Licensing Executives Society (LES) is to turn our collective awareness into useful content for our profession. It seeks connections and hidden structures. LES has taken a broad view of “High Tech,” beyond the traditional bounds of electronics, software, and systems. The rationale is that in today’s world, “High Tech” now extends to life science, agriculture, chemical and energy industries, and beyond. Currently HTS recognizes technical subsector committees in: Aerospace & Transportation; Mobile & Consumer Electronics; Clean Tech; Cloud, Content & Communications (3CX); Gaming IP & Technology; Nanotechnology; Semiconductors; and Software. This is not a comprehensive representation of all that could be considered High Tech. However, these self-assembling groups of industries within High Tech serve to identify and focus on internally important market dynamics that would be lost when generalized at sector scale. For example, the advance of technology has rendered digital content inextricable from the manner in which it is transmitted and stored. Similarly, telecommunications has taken on new meanings, and “the cloud” which has been discussed within many subsector committees, is spontaneously generating an intellectual property life of its own. Other technology convergences have led subsector committees to collaborate with each other to discuss topics of mutual interest. Such subsector level interaction has led to meaningful international outreach in aerospace and transportation, software/copyright and M&CE (mobile and consumer electronics). Increased resolution also puts trends into context. At a macro-scale, one can identify standard IP and licensing issues that are recognized across industries and sectors. However, at the more granular subsector level, different issues emerge and dominate trends at different times. An appealing and useful construct for comparing and learning across such diversity was presented in a Clean Tech panel discussion1 at the LES (USA & Canada) 2012 Winter Meeting.2 Clean Tech represents a broad enough spectrum of markets so that three stages of market evolution emerge. •Early Stage: behaviors focus on IP filings, “land- grab” and M&A activity. Questions that often surface are: IP filing strategy–What is being displaced ■ Annemarie Meike, by the business? 2012-2013 LES (USA & Canada) What could displace High Tech Sector Chair; the business? What Lawrence Livermore businesses control a National Laboratory, key aspect of the Business Development Executive, supply chain, price Livermore, CA, point, take to mar- ket strategy, and E-mail: [email protected] traction gaining strategy? •Emerging Markets Stage: behaviors such as technology transfers and IP licensing can be observed. Questions that arise are: integration and systems—What inventions will end up where? How will standardization impact product line and IP portfolio? What are the licensing opportunities and threats? •Mainstream Marketing Stage: behaviors focus on IP licensing, IP sales, IP enforcement, and NPE (non-practicing entity) activity. Questions deal with: strengthening portfolios, aggregation of patents, NPE activity, and focusing activity on sales versus enforcement. The above stages can be discerned across sectors and across national boundaries. For example, some High Tech subsectors such as Semiconductors represent well-established industries, while others, such as Nanotechnology are filled with start-up ventures that 1. Joe Jennings, Drakes Bay Company, LLC. 2. Anaheim, California http://www.lesusacanada.org/meetings/ prior-meetings/2012-winter-meeting. December 2013 214 Assessing High Tech are yet to establish the field. A final stage completes the picture: •Mature Market Stage: behaviors continue to focus on IP licensing, IP sales, IP enforce ment and NPE activity. However, a decreasing number of companies share the market, and similarly chances for successful start-up companies decrease. Questions focus similarly to: the Main Stream Marketing Stage, strengthening portfolios, aggregation of patents, NPE activity, and focusing activity on sales versus enforcement. However, the answers to these questions can shift with the realities of the Mature Market. With such an evolutionary overlay one can compare trends between subsectors. As a consequence it is possible not only to refine the ability to predict change, but also to ask such questions as: How much can one predict? How much is 20/20 hindsight? And, how much depends on a submarine trend that we do not recognize until after it passes? For example, what about government policy that can affect a trend at any stage? Or perhaps more subtly, can cultural trends and choices be perceived? These articles represent the sophisticated analysis of many people with their fingers on the pulse of their industries. Perhaps looking through these many lenses will provide insight and perspective. This first of a series of papers loosely arranged around observations and trends in High Tech provides an engrossing view: •For Semiconductors, arguably the most mature market of the three, a historical view leads to the best sense of future trends. In “Trends and Opportunities in Semiconductor Licensing,” Stefan Tamme,3 Stephen Schott,4 Dogan Gunes,5 Jeffrey Wallace,6 Richard Boadway,7 Frank Razavi,8 and Marc Pépin,9 discuss the 3. Rambus. 4. Schott Law Office. 5. Skyworks Solutions. 6. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. 7. River Ventures. 8. Purdue Research Foundation. 9. Global Intellectual Strategies. 215 les Nouvelles low incidence of start-up companies, merger and acquisition activity, and the increasing concentration of market share. •The Mobile and Consumer Electronics Paper “An Outline of Trends in Mobile and Consumer Electronics,” by Ram Menon10 and Kevin Spivak11 emphasizes the consequence of the con- vergence of technologies into a single package of increasingly smaller size. FRAND, Patent aggregators and defensive strategies that border on monopoly concerns are big in this area. •The Software paper, “Trends and Observations in Software,” by Susan O. Goldsmith,12 Ian G. DiBernardo,13 Frank L. Bernstein,14 Scott Smedresman,1 Michael Gulliford,15 Richard P.W. Stobbe16 focuses on patent eligibility laws, con- trasting U.S. and Canada developments, and then on software applications on interactive screens, or “apps” and data privacy, two increasingly important and mutually intertwined subjects. And finally, •In “Samsung and LG: From Also-Rans to Dominance in Consumer Electronics,” Robert A. Myers17 takes a historical and govern- ment policy view of two major Korean firms and discusses how several key decisions made by the government influenced their success. The High Tech Sector Trends and Opportunities Series presents diverse approaches and visions in that time honored quest for meaningful market trends. It offers an opportunity to develop and share our collective knowledge, which is greater than the sum of its parts. Test your best ideas regarding trends in high tech industries and contribute to the next of this series. ■ 10. BlackBerry. 11. Greenblum & Bernstein, P.L.C. 12. Sorin Rand LLP. 13. Stroock & Stroock & Lavan LLP. 14. Kenyon & Kenyon LLP. 15. Sorin IP Group, LLC. 16. Field LLP. 17. Fairfield Resources International, Inc., and Columbia Business School. Semiconductor Licensing Trends Trends And Opportunities In Semiconductor Licensing By Stefan Tamme, Stephen Schott, Dogan Gunes, Jeffrey Wallace, Richard Boadway, Frank Razavi, and Marc Pépin Summary The following article examines the impact of current business, technology, and international trends in the semiconductor industry, and anticipates future challenges and opportunities for intellectual property licensing in this market. The working team brought to bear many decades of work experience in different parts of the semiconductor business to illustrate relevant topics from a business, technical and legal perspective, which are required disciplines to formulate and execute comprehensive intellectual property strategies and execute successful licensing programs. This paper does not attempt to describe every development in detail, but provides pointers for further study by interested readers. I. Semiconductor Industry and Business Trends The Semiconductor Industry is Maturing he semiconductor industry is a diverse industry that has grown tremendously over the past several decades as integrated circuits (IC) have penetrated virtually all aspects of people’s lives: computers, communication systems, consumer goods, and cars, to name a few. In the 1960s and 1970s, the market was driven by military and mainframe applications. In the 1980s, the PC revolution took over, and in the 1990s, the explosive growth of the Internet and mobile communications became the market’s main driving force. Since the year 2000, continued expansion of all these markets, plus increasing penetration into other new product categories—such as digital TVs, mobile phones, and all types of other smart devices—have become new growth engines. However, as the semiconductor industry exceeded $300B in annual sales for the first time in 2010, the rate of growth has slowed from high double digits in the early years, to about 13 percent on average during the 1990s and about 8 percent since 2000.1 While new applications continue to arise and be addressed, the market will continue to mature, and the growth rate will slowly moderate toward world GDP growth, T 1. WSTS statistics: http://www.wsts.org/Teaser-Left/HistoricalBillings-Report. which has averaged 3.4 percent since 1980.2 The semiconductor industry remains a market of discrete sub-markets though, where some market segments still show high growth, but at a macro level this is offset by lower growth in other segments. For example, ICs for smart phones are still showing strong growth rates, while the desktop PC market has been stagnating. Other segments, such as the DRAM memory market, have shown significant cyclicality in the past, alternating between periods of strong positive and negative growth. This dynamic has been based on the undifferentiated, commodity nature of the DRAM products, combined with cycles of demand for increased DR AM in PCs and other devices. Due to these factors, the number of DRAM producers has been reduced through M&A transactions and business exits from about 20 in 19953 to only three 2. IMF World Economic Outlook database: http:// www.imf.org/external/pubs/ ft/weo/2013/01/weodata/index.aspx. 3. A Study of the DR AM industr y: http://dspace. mit.edu/bitstream/handle/1721.1/59138/659514510. pdf. ■ Stefan Tamme, Rambus Inc., Vice President of IP Strategy, Sunnyvale, CA E-mail: [email protected] ■ Stephen Schott, Schott Law Office, Attorney, San Mateo, CA E-mail: [email protected] ■ Dogan Gunes, Skyworks Solutions, Inc., Sr. Manager, Woburn, MA E-mail: dogan.gunes@ skyworksinc.com ■ Jeffrey Wallace, University of Illinois, Senior Technology Manager, Urbana, IL E-mail: [email protected] ■ Richard Boadway, River Ventures Inc., President and CEO, Brockville, Ontario, Canada E-mail: rboadway@ riverventures.ca ■ Frank Razavi, Purdue Research Foundation/ Office of Technology Commercialization, Senior Project and Licensing Manager, West Lafayette, IN E-mail: [email protected] ■ Marc Pépin, Global Intellectual Strategies, Director, IP and Engineering, Stittsville, ON, Canada E-mail: [email protected] December 2013 216 Semiconductor Licensing Trends majors by 2013 (Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron). In such competitive segments and other such commodity markets, chip suppliers often lack pricing power, resulting in pressure to reduce their costs and those of their suppliers, including IP suppliers and licensors. Semiconductor companies are classified as either integrated device manufacturers (IDM) that own their own fabrication facilities (e.g. Intel, Samsung), or as fabless semiconductor companies (e.g. Qualcomm, Broadcom, nVidia) that contract their device manufacturing to third party foundries like TSMC or Global Foundries. Many former IDM’s such as Freescale, STMicroelectronics, Fujitsu, and others have been adopting a hybrid model—often referred to as “fab-lite”—over the past decade. In this model, companies maintain some of their own fabs, often for specialty devices, while they outsource much of their advanced process capacity needs to foundries. In addition to semiconductor ICs or components, related markets in the semiconductor ecosystem include foundry fabrication services, processing equipment, IC design tools, semiconductor intellectual property, and semiconductor materials. Figures 1 to 3 show breakdowns of semiconductor sales by end application, geographic region, and device type respectively as reported by IHS/ISuppli.4 Figure 2 shows that 57 percent of the roughly $300B in semiconductor sales were first made to companies in the Asia-Pacific region, excluding Japan. The vast 4. IHS iSuppli Competitive Landscaping Tool, 2013. 217 les Nouvelles Figure 1. Major Markets By Application4 Automotive and Industrial 18% Data Processing (Computing) 34% Consumer Electronics Categories 18% Wired & Wireless Communication 30% Figure 2. Regional Sales Distribution4 EMEA 11% Asia-Pacific 57% Japan 15% Americas 17% Figure 3. Major Device Categories4 Analog IC 15% Memory IC 17% Microcomponent IC 20% Optical Semiconductor 10% Discretes, Sensors & Actuators 9% Logic IC 29% Semiconductor Licensing Trends majority of these sales were in the People’s Republic of China (PRC), where a large part of electronics manufacturing is done by so called contract manufacturing companies like Hon-Hai (Foxconn), Flextronics, and others. Starting a new semiconductor company, even in a fabless model, has become increasingly expensive, with typical investments now ranging between 10 million to well over 100 million dollars,5 depending on the complexity of the chip development and the nature of its end market. At the same time, the number of successful semiconductor IPOs in the United States and EMEA has been shrinking since the late 1990s, while there has been higher activity in Asia, mostly in China and Taiwan. The pie chart in Figure 4 shows that only 6 percent of semiconductor exits between Figure 4. Semiconductor Exits From 2002-20116 Out of Business 19% IPO 6% M&A 75% 2002 and 2011 were IPOs, while the vast majority of exits (75 percent) were mergers or acquisitions. M&A activity has partly compensated for less buoyant public markets, but M&A valuations are generally lower than public market valuations. This, in combination with the increasing capital requirements for start-ups, has caused a reduction in (venture) capital investments into early-stage semiconductor companies as shown in Figure 5, and has resulted in fewer startups being created. Over the long term, this dynamic will result in more concentration of chip supply. While the two largest semiconductor companies,8 Intel and Samsung, have grown market share over the past two decades, the top 20 chip makers’ combined market share has actually declined from about 75 percent in 1990 to 65 percent by 2010.9 While this trend, at a first glance, appears counter intuitive, it was at least, in part, enabled by the emergence of the foundry and fabless semiconductor model during the 1990s, which permitted new entrants into the field without the need for massive capital spending to build their own fabrication facilities. Going forward however, consolidation is expected to continue, as fewer new companies enter the market and existing ones get acquired by larger established companies. To mitigate the immense costs of developing and introducing new technologies, even for established 5. How to raise seed investments for a hardware startup: http://sktainnopartners.com/how-to-raise-seed-investments-fora-hardware-startup/. 6. Pagemill Partners Study in GSA Capital Lite Business Model: http://www.gsaglobal.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/Capital_Lite_Report_2012.pdf. Figure 5. Early Stage Semiconductor Venture Funding 7. GSA Capital Lite Business Model: http:// From 2000-20117 www.gsaglobal.org/wp$492 content/uploads/2012/10/ $500 $466 Capital_Lite_ReTotal Series A/Seed Funding port_2012.pdf. $397 $400 8. Top 25 2012 Semiconductor Supplier Ranking: http://www.icinsights. $300 com/news/bulletins/ PurePlay-Foundries-And$208 $197 $183 $190 Fabless-Suppliers-Are$200 $153 Star-Performers-In-Top25-2012-Semiconductor$100 $78 Supplier-Ranking/. 9. The Semiconduc$25 $14 $21 tor Top 20: http://www. $0 lithoguru.com/scientist/ 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 SemiTop20.html. $M (n = 487) December 2013 218 Semiconductor Licensing Trends semiconductor companies, various consortia have grown in importance. Consortia established to share the cost of technology developments such as EUV, (extreme ultraviolet) 450mm wafers, or sub 10nm process technologies, including the Center for Semiconductor Research at the State University of New York, ITRI in Taiwan, IMEC in Belgium, and the Institute of Microelectronics in Singapore. It remains to be seen whether such consortia will be able to effectively sustain the level of innovation required to propel the industry forward and to provide the requisite intellectual property for the successful development of new market opportunities. Intellectual Property (IP) Licensing in the Semiconductor Business With millions or even billions of transistors, today’s ICs often integrate dozens of different functions, and practice tens of thousands of patented inventions. The value of this IP needs to be priced into the cost of goods for these devices, but the low target price points for consumer devices and the number of functions embodied, can cause pressure on royalty rates and the license fees customers are willing and able to pay for each function. Licensing has a long tradition in the semiconductor business, including process/technology licensing, patent licensing—which can include cross licensing—and more recently, design IP licensing. This dynamic has been driven by the complexity of chip development and manufacture and the myriad talents and inputs required to make increasingly complex semiconductors. As chip designs continue to grow in complexity, the need for licensing IP to address capability gaps and accelerate time-tomarket will be reinforced. In addition to third-party design IP suppliers (e.g. ARM, Synopsys, etc.), several semiconductor companies have also started licensing their design IP to others for integration into SoC (system on chip) designs as more functions that used to be standalone chips become features in those devices. Examples include various types of interface functions, such as Ethernet, HDMI, or even complex blocks like processor cores and GPUs offered by IBM and nVidia. This licensing approach can yield cashflow to offset other development and licensing costs for the licensor semiconductor company. Design IP business models generally use some combination of upfront license fees, re-use fees, support fees, and running royalties to generate revenues back to the licensor. The market size for design IP is largely based on the number of design starts, license 219 les Nouvelles fees associated with these new designs, and the unit volumes for each design start, which drive royalty revenues. The total design IP market in 2012 was about $2B,10 or less than 1 percent of total semiconductor sales, but it is projected to continue growing faster than the industry, at over 10 percent CAGR (compound annual growth rate). Larger licensing companies are trying to consolidate more IP blocks into their product lines to provide more of a one-stop shop and capture a larger share of the market. Over time, many semiconductor companies have started patent licensing campaigns to license or cross-license certain competitors, and also to monetize their substantial IP holdings by licensing companies in adjacent markets. Some early pioneers in this field include Texas Instruments11 and IBM,12 who both generated billions of dollars from licensing their vast patent portfolios to competitors. More recent examples of companies pursuing this strategy include Qualcomm, Micron, and Sandisk who have embarked on licensing programs or have partnered with licensing companies to monetize their extensive patent portfolios. Based on a more sophisticated assessment of how much IP is ‘enough’ for the defense of their core products and markets, divestitures of non-core patents have created an active patent market over the past decade.13 This market was further fueled by a number of semiconductor startups from the late 1990s and early 2000s which have begun selling or licensing their patent portfolios to liquidate the business or to generate cash for expansion. These trends will likely continue for a while, but with fewer startups being created, activity of that type will likely be decreasing over time. With more companies monetizing their patent portfolios, a stagnating number of larger potential licensees, and a trend toward weaker patent enforcement, at least in the United States, there is price pressure on royalty rates and license fees. While the chip suppliers may continue to consolidate to improve their competitive position in terms of cost 10. Synopsys, Imagination make gains in semi IP ranking; http:// www.eetimes.com/document.asp?doc_id=1280825. 11. Patents, Standards, and Licensing Working (Well) Together at Texas Instruments; http://www2.aipla.org/html/mw/2010/ papers/Bassuk_Paper.pdf. 12. IBM’s Patent/Licensing Connection; http://www.industryweek.com/product-development/ibms-patentlicensing-connection. 13. Turning the Spotlight on the Brokered Patent Market; http://www.iam-magazine.com/blog/detail.aspx?g=1e58b1bc0a55-4ce6-8741-b874495dd9e2. Semiconductor Licensing Trends of manufacture and negotiating position with their end customers, such consolidation will likely have an adverse impact on IP suppliers and licensors of these chip suppliers as their potential licensees are gaining more buying power. II. Semiconductor Technology Trends The semiconductor industry is one of the most knowledge and technology intensive industries.14 Some of the vast array of technological developments in this field, and their impact on industry licensing activity, will be highlighted here. As more complex technologies and designs are developed, which generally generate more patented inventions, the result is the generation of more patent licensing activity. Figure 6 displays a count of U.S. patents issued with class codes16 representative of the semiconductor industry. The class codes represent the patents’ primary technology areas determined by the PTO. One significant observation is the near 50 percent jump in issued patents between 2009 and 2010. While the PTO has reduced the average pendency period from about 38 months in 2009 to about 30 months today, the continued high numbers in 2011 and 2012 indicate that the patent issuance jump was not caused solely by the PTO’s efficiency improvements, but also from sustained patenting activity in the technology space. One might surmise from Figure 6 that the industry has increased its focus on obtaining patents and has acknowledged the business value of the intellectual property produced. For conventional silicon-based semiconductor ICs, the industry is still driving to increase performance while reducing cost/size/power consumption of the transistor at the rate established by Moore’s law.17 However, the implementation of the latest semiconductor process nodes at 20 nm and below requires the investment of billions of dollars due to rising fab costs, which makes it the domain of large established companies with the ability, resources, and scale to conduct the necessary development. While it is unlikely that start-ups will secure the resources to fund implementation of process nodes beyond 20 nm, their efforts could still result in the next incremental improvement or an entirely disruptive technology. The transition to mass production will likely require some type of partnership and transfer of IP between the inventors and large companies. Disruptive Opportunities Through Revolutionary Technologies Still Exist Key technology is being developed in support of next generation silicon technologies and the developers usually strive to protect their inventions by obtaining relevant IP rights. Expected to be commercialized after 2015, some significant developments include the move to extreme ultraviolet (EUV) providing lithography at 13.5 nm wavelength, and the move to Figure 6. U.S. Patents by Class Code Issued from 2002-201215 30000 25000 257 438 20000 713 15000 712 711 10000 710 5000 709 708 0 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 14. NSF: Science and Engineering Indicators, Ch. 4: http:// www.nsf.gov/statistics/seind12/. 15. Source: U.S.P.T.O. 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 16. 257 - relates to Active Solid State Devices; 438–Semiconductor Device Manufacturing; 709–Electrical Computers and Digital Processing Systems. 17. Moore’s Law and Intel Innovation: http://www.intel.com/ content/www/us/en/history/museum-gordon-moore-law.html. December 2013 220 Semiconductor Licensing Trends 450 mm wafers. Another significant development, which started over a decade ago and has begun entering mass production recently, is the transition to 3D transistors (e.g. FinFETs) from planar CMOS devices which will be necessary for future process nodes. These disruptive technologies, along with earlier innovations such as Hi-K metal gate (HKMG) technology, are extending the continuous scaling of devices following Moore’s law. FinFET manufacturing is now being more broadly adopted for devices like mobile application processors and is likely to result in major changes to the process flow, equipment, electronic design automation, IP, and design methodology. In the memory market, primarily consisting of DRAM and Flash memory, major technology transitions are on the horizon as scaling of legacy technologies is becoming harder and harder. New memory technologies, expected to enable continued density increases and cost reductions, include 3D Flash, Resistive RAM, and STT-MRAM. Other technologies, such as phase change memory, ferromagnetic memory, and optical storage are under development as well. As evident, there are many technology options and there are no clear winners at this point. Another innovative segment that has shown significant growth is micro electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) technology for applications such as gyroscopes, accelerometers, microphones, and pressure sensors. MEMS can be built using many of the same established silicon processes, which have been an area of active patenting during the last decade. The MEMS sector grew another 10 percent to become an $11B business in 2012 and analysts expect a 1213 percent CAGR through 2018 to create a $22.5B MEMS market.18 Beyond silicon, there are significant IP developments in organic semiconductors (OTFTs, OLEDs, and polymer solar cells), LEDs for lighting applications, solar PV cells, gallium nitride (GaN) and silicon carbide (SiC for high power applications, and GaN for RF and mm-wave applications). Additional examples of technologies still under development include graphene transistors and amorphous silicon transistors (on flexible plastic substrates). Nanostructures may find their way into semiconductors in the form of carbon-nanotubes, quantum dots, and nano-wires. New application areas include millimeter-wave imaging, 60 GHz RF transceivers, very low power circuits for portable and battery-less systems (such as sensors), and energy harvesting circuits. Performance 18. Yole Developement: http://www.yole.fr/. 221 les Nouvelles per watt is starting to replace performance per dollar as a key metric in many applications. In the device fabrication and packaging area, the trend is to achieve further size reductions by 2.5D and 3D stacking, thru silicon vias (TSV), silicon interposers, and wafer level chip scale packaging. Integration of multifunctional devices enabled by 3D interconnect is expected to bring increased performance and functionality along with cost reductions. In addition, the SEMATECH Forum has been promoting 3D Interconnect Standards Development. As a result, adoption of 3D integration is rapidly spreading to a wide variety of companies across the semiconductor and MEMS industries. The massive investments required to commercialize new disruptive technologies opens up opportunities for licensing of technology and patented inventions in these new areas. Implications for Licensing Specialization/Outsourcing of IP Blocks Modern system-on-chips (SoCs) and field-programmable gate array (FPGA) devices allow, and for many applications require, the integration of many system functions, combined with substantial amounts of firmware, embedded software, and even complete operating systems. Developing this functionality all from scratch is too costly and slow even for companies that have all the necessary skillsets in-house. As stated earlier, this force has helped to create the $2B+ design intellectual property market over the past two decades and is continuing to drive it. Design IP allows SoC designs to be constructed using pre-qualified hardware blocks known as intellectual property IP cores and software modules known as software IP blocks. Negotiating and managing licensing agreements with the various IP suppliers and tracking the IP usage and compliance with such licenses across large corporations with many end products, represents a formidable challenge. As a result, novel IP licensing schemes are being proposed. In one example, a pay-per-use licensing scheme is proposed for IP cores in which a third party runs a metering service to monitor use.19 For third party patent holders that seek to monetize their patented technologies, this provides a range of licensing opportunities. For example, if a particular IP core is implemented in a number of SoCs from different suppliers, a third party patent holder may have 19. Roel Maes, Dries Schellenkens, and Ingrid Verbauwhede, “A Pay-per-Use Licensing Scheme for Hardware IP Cores in Recent SRAM-Based FPGAs”, IEEE Transaction On Information Forensics And Security, Vol. 7, No. 1, February 2012. Semiconductor Licensing Trends a choice as to whether to sign a licensing agreement with the IP core provider, with each SoC supplier integrating the core, or even with the system companies using the SoCs with those cores in their products. Choosing the optimal licensing strategy depends on a number of factors, including the geographic coverage of the patents relative to the location where products are manufactured, sold, or used. Detectability of Patented Technologies The detection of patented technologies in the semiconductor industry poses ever-increasing challenges. The shrinking feature sizes of modern semiconductor fabrication processes require more advanced analysis tools circuit detection/extraction. As feature sizes are reaching the limits of existing imaging capabilities, new technologies will have to be developed. In addition, the distance between the different layers of metallization is also decreasing, thereby driving the need for more complex delayering techniques for exposing the various layers of circuitry within an IC. As more SoC functionality is being implemented in software, software reverse engineering is now commonly used to investigate the functionality of SoCs. Software reverse engineering adds yet another level of complexity and also requires a completely different skill set for analysis. Public access to decompiled code is rare and in most cases requires code extraction from a working device, decompression, and then decompiling of the code. This entire process is complex and costly with a substantial risk of failure. The level of risk is exacerbated by the fact that protective measures, such as removal of ASCII characters in the code and encryption, are increasingly used to prevent reverse engineering of the software. The added challenges in detecting patented technologies have a direct impact on licensing activities and on the value of patent portfolios. Patents claiming subject matter that is too difficult and/or costprohibitive to detect are much less attractive and may not provide much licensing value. Patent Protection for Software With the increasing shift of development effort from hardware to software, appropriate software protection must become an integral part of IP strategies. When considering licensing opportunities, a major concern is the ability to enforce IP rights. While still evolving, the current level of patent protection for software varies from one country to another, and in some cases protection is limited or not available at all. This limits the ability to enforce software IP and can diminish the relative IP protection of semiconductor devices that have substantial software content. Ecosystem Complexities The semiconductor supply chain ecosystem is complex and globally dispersed and many semiconductor companies serve the same system customers and use the same suppliers for their manufacturing, equipment, tools, and design IP needs. These relationships add complexity to licensing agreements as companies desire to gain license coverage that includes their suppliers, customers, and affiliates. As a result, licenses or covenants may be granted to cover intermediaries (e.g. retailers, wholesalers, distributors, dealers, resellers, importers, and exporters) or suppliers (e.g. foundries, contractors, assembly and test facilities etc.). Any licensor needs to carefully consider the trade-offs of providing upstream and downstream coverage in a license agreement to not inadvertently license much more of the market than intended or meaning within the economic parameters of a given transaction. A further complicating factor is the evolving law around patent exhaustion, injunctions, and other rights and remedies. This makes patent licensing complex and mandates detailed planning for any licensing campaign to make sure that it can accomplish its strategic objectives. Managing the Cost of IP Methods used to manage intellectual property and its related costs vary widely. Considering the investment in research to develop a technology and the costs of securing and maintaining patents in multiple countries, it becomes critical for companies to gain a deep understanding of their patent portfolio, and how it generates business value. It is not uncommon for a single patent family with multiple international filings and continuations to generate lifetime costs well in excess of $100,000. Selecting and executing appropriate international filing strategies, aligned with business objectives, thus is another critical element of IP strategies. IP-savvy companies manage their portfolios by understanding the technical and business value of individual patents, building portfolios around strategic technologies and searching externally for complementary IP to strengthen these portfolios. Such a portfolio approach entails the scoring of patents on various criteria to identify the patents that are most valuable and relevant to the company’s business strategy. High-value patents with high relevance to business objectives should be actively developed in all important geographic markets. Patents that do not align with business objectives can be sold or abanDecember 2013 222 Semiconductor Licensing Trends doned to manage maintenance expenses. There are a number of tools and consultants that have developed proprietary patent valuation methods, which can help evaluate and classify a portfolio. These techniques can also be used to identify areas of vulnerability, where identified third party patents may be acquired to fill the gaps. Since the invention of the transistor and later, the integrated circuit, the United States has been a leader in semiconductor development and manufacturing. Over time however, other regions such as Europe, Japan, and more recently, Taiwan, South Korea, and China have developed substantial semiconductor design and manufacturing capabilities. While India has attracted many IC design centers, the country has not yet developed a significant manufacturing base for either semiconductors or electronics. The broad availability of the process of discovery, well-developed statutes and jurisprudence, comparatively high damages awards, and a large market make the United States a favored country for patent enforcement. However, the changing geographic distribution and economics of semiconductor device manufacturing, packaging and their assembly into finished products has had and will continue to have substantial impacts on the protection and enforcement strategies for semiconductor related intellectual property rights. There are significant differences in the legal systems and IP protections afforded in other countries compared to the United States, including licensing and enforcement regulations and practices. If a company intends to engage in licensing outside of the United States, it has to ensure that the licensed technologies are backed up by patents, trademarks, copyrights, and applicable intellectual/industrial property rights in these countries. While the United States is still one of the major electronics markets, its relative importance decreases as emerging markets continue to expand. The trend towards non-U.S. manufacturing of semiconductors and electronics also continues. Although there have been a few instances of electronic product assembly moving back the United States,20 the vast majority of such assembly remains outside the country. A typical IC might be manufactured in a foundry in Taiwan or the People’s Republic of China, packaged in Malaysia, the Philippines, or the PRC and then assembled into a final product in the PRC. Such semiconductors may then enter the United States incorporated into such a final product or perhaps never even enter the country. Although a lawsuit in a U.S. district court or a proceeding before the U.S. International Trade Commission against the importer of the final product may be legally possible, for patents owned by a semiconductor manufacturer, the importer’s market power as a potential or actual customer may make such enforcement economically impossible. Consequently, assertion against a competitor in other countries would be preferable, but not always practical, given the wide range of IP protection available around the world. A growing number of semiconductor manufacturers and research entities have the economic power to insist that the laws of their own country govern any agreement, and that any dispute be resolved before the courts of their country. Entities whose business consists of asserting patents may not be subject to the market power of an importer. However, some entities license know-how or non-patent intellectual property in addition to patents. For those “value-added” licensing entities, the party to whom they can add the greatest value may be semiconductor manufacturers. This may make importers a less appropriate licensee. Naturally, this will depend, among other factors, on the relative value of the patents versus know-how and other intellectual property. While these economic and geographic trends may not be specific to semiconductors, they are certainly highly relevant here due to the complex global nature of the semiconductor supply and value chains. These trends increase the importance of filing, licensing, and enforcing intellectual property in key semiconductor manufacturing and consuming countries. As intellectual property rights in other countries have grown in importance, companies need to actively monitor the legal and regulatory developments in those regions. Below is a summary of a number of recent changes in key countries collected from practitioners in each of the markets. People’s Republic of China (PRC) From 2003 to 2011, China’s share of the worldwide semiconductor consumption market has grown from less than 19 percent to over 47 percent.21 This makes the country the biggest geographic market. 20. Moto X: First U.S.-Made Smartphone Just as Cheap to Produce as Others: http://techland.time.com/2013/08/28/motox-first-u-s-made-smartphone-just-as-cheap-to-produce-as-others/. 21. China’s impact on the semiconductor industry: 2012 update: http://www.pwc.com/gx/en/technology/chinas-impact-onsemiconductor-industry/download-the-report.jhtml. III. International Trends 223 les Nouvelles Semiconductor Licensing Trends While over 60 percent of these semiconductors are still assembled into goods for export, the domestic market has been rapidly growing at a CAGR of 24 percent since 2003 and it now represents about 20 percent of the worldwide total. Even though there are now over 500 indigenous IC design companies in China (about 30 of which are publicly listed) the market is still dominated by global players led by Intel and Samsung. Combined, the top-10 international suppliers represent about 45 percent of the market and no Chinese company has made it into the top-35 suppliers yet. In the PRC, a recent trend has been toward bolstering the interim remedies available to patent owners and the evidence preservation mechanisms. Matthew Laight, who practices in Bird & Bird LLP’s Hong Kong office, indicated that the 2012 amendments to the Civil Procedure Law allow a party to seek an evidence or asset preservation order before filing a court action. The pre-action evidence preservation order is useful where there is a risk that evidence may be destroyed if the defendant becomes aware of the lawsuit. The pre-action asset preservation order may be important in dealing with smaller entities and in the case of counterfeit or diverted semiconductor products. It may be less important against large alleged infringers with substantial assets. Laight also reported that the 2010 amendments to the Patent Law clarified the procedure for the grant of a preliminary injunction, and codified evidence preservation laws. He believes that these amendments will benefit patent owners. Due to the lack of discovery in PRC civil litigation, damages can be difficult to prove, and damages fixed by statute are often awarded. These statutory damages have been doubled, from RMB 500,000 to RMB 1,000,000 (about US$ 150,000). Although likely to be viewed as a step in the right direction by patent owners, the impact of such increased damages on semiconductor IP strategy may be limited. Taiwan TSMC remains the major force in the Taiwanese semiconductor industry, and combined with UMC represents over 50 percent of the global foundry market that is fueling fabless semiconductor companies. While TSMC and MediaTek, the largest domestic fabless company, have shown significant growth recently, other parts of the Taiwanese industry have struggled, exemplified by the dwindling number of local DRAM companies, and some of the smaller fabless companies with a focus on the PC market.22 However, Taiwan’s semiconductor industry remains well positioned to benefit from the continued expansion of the Chinese market; its broad established base of design houses and manufacturing companies; and the level of government support. In Taiwan, the low enforcement success rate of patent owners since the 2008 creation of a dedicated IP court may be addressed by a complete revision of patent law taking effect in 2013 and new regulations from the Taiwan Intellectual Property Office. Yu-Lan Kuo of Formosa Transnational Attorneys at Law reports that patent owners will be permitted to correct claims by incorporating features described in the specification to clarify the meaning of the existing claims. This opportunity to alter claims in the midst of a court proceeding could substantially increase a patent owner’s odds of successful enforcement. Up until this year, if a single claim in a Taiwan patent was found to be invalid during an invalidation action, the entire patent became invalid. This was changed so that only the invalidated claims are invalidated. In addition, corrections to translation errors are now permitted. This will be of particular importance to the owners of patents first filed in another language. All of these changes should serve to improve patent owners’ odds of successful enforcement. These changes seem likely to make it more attractive to file and enforce patents in Taiwan for all intellectual property owners, including those working in semiconductor technology. Kuo also commented that Taiwan’s semiconductor companies have become much more sophisticated in dealing with intellectual property, adding that they have become much more proactive in patent filing, prosecution, and licensing. It is interesting to note that Taiwan is undertaking reforms to address the issue of poorly translated patents. Because of the economics of patent prosecution and the tight budget to which prosecutors are often held, it is highly likely that translation errors are a common problem in other countries as well. Any entity filing for patents, including any entity filing for semiconductor patents, would be well served to monitor the quality of its foreign filings. Japan In the late 1980s, half of the top-20 semiconductor companies were Japanese, including the top three in 1989.23 Fast forward to the year 2012, and only five Japanese companies are listed in the top-20, the 22. Taiwan semiconductor industry undergoing structural shift: http://www.pwc.tw/en/challenges/industry-trends/industrytrends-20120924.jhtml. 23. Semiconductor sales leaders by year: http://en.wikipedia. org/wiki/Semiconductor_sales_leaders_by_year. December 2013 224 Semiconductor Licensing Trends biggest in fifth rank. This illustrates the tremendous change and consolidation the industry has gone through over the past two decades, a process that is still in play, as evidenced by the recent bankruptcy of Elpida Memory and near-bankruptcy of Renesas Electronics. The industry has been slowly adopting fab-lite business models and several companies have also started monetizing their substantial IP portfolios through licensing campaigns, partnerships, and divestitures. As manufacturing of consumer electronics, mobile phones, and PCs has shifted to China, Japanese companies faced tough competition from Taiwanese and South Korean semiconductor competitors. As a result, Japanese chip makers have been looking for new markets better aligned with their domestic industrial base, such as automotive, industrial, medical, and new energy applications. Some have argued that litigation in Japan is biased against the patent holder.24 Possibly in response to this perception, Japan amended a number of aspects of its patent law effective in 2012.25 Previously, if a non-exclusive license to patents was not registered with the Japan Patent Office (JPO), the license would not have effect against third parties. If a patent covered by an unregistered license was transferred to a third party, the third party could assert that patent against the licensee. JPO reported that the system for registering non-exclusive licenses had been “scarcely utilized,” and under the amendments, non-exclusive patent licenses will now remain in effect even without registration. However, the laws for the registration of exclusive licenses remained unchanged. Other changes include a new procedure for transferring patents granted to one party to a joint development agreement to the other party, when that agreement provided it should be granted to the other party. Previously, there was a procedure to invalidate a patent granted to a party who was not the rightful owner, but not to transfer it. In addition, there were a number of procedural changes to coordinate the invalidity proceedings that could take place before the JPO and the trial court. Among other things, these changes were intended to prevent the patent owner from transferring a proceeding back and forth between the JPO and the IP High Court. Although not specific to semiconductors, these changes may be of particular importance to the semiconductor industry. The increased protection 24. “Is Japan a Hostile Environment for Patents,” by Masahiro Samejima, Intellectual Asset Management, January/February 2010. 25. Japan Patent Office Annual Report 2011, Part 2. 225 les Nouvelles for licensees may make licensing in IP blocks more attractive, and strengthen trends for the outsourcing of those IP blocks that are already present in the semiconductor industry. Because of the increasing expense of developing IP for semiconductors, the existence of laws providing for the transfer of IP developed under a JDA (joint development agreement) to the rightful owner may make such collaboration more attractive. South Korea While there are a number of smaller semiconductor companies, the South Korean semiconductor industry26 today is dominated by Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, which ranked number two and seven globally in 2012. These two companies represent over 60 percent of the global DRAM and over 40 percent of the NAND Flash market and are expected to maintain their strengths in these areas while they branch out into other segments, such as the foundry services offered by Samsung. Korea has long been a net payer of IP-related royalties,27 and is attempting to shrink this imbalance through the creation of a government backed patent investment fund28 that would aggregate and license patents to international companies. This idea has also gained traction in Japan, Taiwan, China, and also in Europe.29 According to Byeongmo Lee, a South Korean patent attorney, the Korea Fair Trade Commission published the“Review Guidelines on Unfair Intellectual Property Rights” in 2010. These guidelines make the following practices, amongst others, subject to possible review: markedly unreasonable royalty rates; refusal to license; limits on trade volume, territory, or duration and other restrictions that are unjust; limits on who can purchase a licensed good; and restrictions on the price of licensed products. Lee also reported that in in 2012 the Korea Fair Trade Commission published the “Guidelines for Fair Patent License Agreements,” under which practices subject to review included imposition of disadvantageous terms on a party to a license that had an inferior bargaining position and causing a party to a license to misunderstand the license terms or the relevant patent. Lee indicated that the Korea Fair Trade Commission also issued the 26. Korea Semiconductor Industry Association: http://www. ksia.or.kr. 27. Royalties Paid Overseas Hit Record High: http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/biz/2013/05/123_55104.html. 28. Inside Asia’s patent funds, Intellectual Asset Management Magazine, July/August 2012. 29. New rivals for Apple and Google in patent fight: South Korea and France: http://www.mercurynews.com/ci_22831761/ new-rivals-apple-and-google-patent-fight-south. Semiconductor Licensing Trends “Model Operating Guidelines for Standard Setting Organizations for Voluntary Compliance” with the Monopoly Regulation and Fair Trade Act in 2012. The publication of these three guidelines may be a move toward a more proactive role for the Fair Trade Commission. Semiconductor companies licensing intellectual property that may have an impact on the Korean market should consider these guidelines in drafting their agreements. David Hunjoon Kim, from the YOU ME Patent & Law Firm located in Seoul, Korea, reports that he has observed an increase in the selection of arbitration as a means for dispute resolution. This may make settling any dispute arising under a license quicker and more efficient. In addition, Kim reports that from the beginning of this year, eight Korean banks have begun allowing their borrowers to use intellectual property portfolios as collateral, which may provide a new source of financing for entities whose primary asset is intellectual property. Because of this change, Mr. Kim expects to see an increase in the purchase and licensing of intellectual property portfolios. The impact of this trend on semiconductor enforcement and licensing may be to give smaller companies financing to help realize the value of their intellectual property. Europe The most visible semiconductor European semiconductor companies are STMicrolectronics, Infineon Technologies, and NXP Semiconductors, who have lost 30 percent global market share in the last six years,30 not counting the 2009 demise of Qimonda, Europe’s last remaining DRAM company. However, there are a number of smaller specialized firms addressing markets like automotive, industrial, and medical applications with diverse products such as power electronics, analog ICs, and MEMS products. Global Foundries maintains the biggest foundry operation in Europe, but there are several other smaller mixed signal foundries as well, such as X-fab, LFoundry, and others.31 Europe increasingly builds on the (IPR) Enforcement Directive 2004/48/EC according to Alexander Duisberg of Bird & Bird LLP’s Munich office. He indicates that although the (IPR) Enforcement Directive’s full impact is difficult to assess at this time, the frequency at which the procedural changes have been implemented in the civil law country courts is increasing. The (IPR) Enforcement Directive, once the court practice has been more broadly developed, has 30. Profile: European semiconductor industry: Public Service Review: Europe, Issue 25, 16 April 2013. 31. Semiconductor Industry Leaders Contemplate Region’s Future at ISS Europe 2013: http://www.semi.org/en/node/44966. the potential to cause European countries to provide more timely court proceedings for IP cases, stronger IP enforcement, and to increase IP owner’s access to evidence of infringement and to interlocutory injunctions. Duisberg also indicated that he has observed a gradual increase in the use of alternative dispute resolution in contracts, including license agreements. Duisberg stated that in his experience, “mediation has proven a very powerful tool in many situations where parties have reached a dead-lock and are hesitant to go to court.” Strategic Recommendations Many of the economic and legal changes described for countries in the Asia Pacific region have the potential to strengthen the enforceability of intellectual property rights. In response to this trend, and the continuing growth of semiconductor-related activities in Asia, companies should consider increasing their patent filings in that region. The graph in Figure 7 would suggest that such a shift is already taking place. In preparing the chart, data on patent applications by technology was not available from WIPO. Patent application publications were selected instead of patent grants, because applications may be abandoned after publication but before grant, therefore patent application publication data provides a better measure of patent filing activity. As is clear from the graph, the rate of semiconductor patent application publication has grown at the most rapid pace in the PRC and Korea. Although the United States has seen a four-fold increase in semiconductor patent application publication, and has the second highest rate, its rate of increase has not been nearly as great as for the PRC and Korea. Although the growth rate of patents from Europe and Japan has not kept pace with those of the PRC or Korea, or even the United States, Japan remains the country in which the most semiconductor patent applications are published. As always, the relative proportions of patent filings or acquisitions in each country must be customized for the particular needs of the patent filer or acquirer. The usual issues of limited budgets, investment time frame, and location of manufacturers and markets continue to apply. However, it has become even more important for patent owners to anticipate against whom and where they are likely to enforce their patents. A non-practicing entity may decide on a different proportion between United States and international patent filings than a semiconductor manufacturer whose customers import finished products into the country. Business All indications are that the amount of licensing in December 2013 226 Semiconductor Licensing Trends The development of industry-sponsored patent aggregators is an example of a preemptive method for mitigation of assertion risks. Traditional patent pools like MPEG-LA have been complemented by joint licensing programs, and more recently, by subscription based or one-by-one aggregation schemes such as provided by RPX or AST. Companies should take a more proactive stance to secure key IP that can provide bargaining power during licensing negotiations and thus help to counter assertion 2007 2009 2011 risks and ensure freedom to operate. Korea US Technology With the increased patenting activity, organizations will have a challenge carving out attractive technology positions solely using internal resources and will increasingly need to work with third parties to gain access to developing technologies. Concepts like “Open Innovation”33 and “Want-Find-Get-Manage”34 are approaches that may be useful to organizations for leveraging third party technologies as part of their innovation process. Patent search tools continue to develop and enable analysts to understand and identify organizations that are leading the development of certain technologies, as well as identify potential competitors or licensees. Improved search tools combined with patent valuation techniques allow the mining of patent portfolios of national labs and universities. Companies can use that data to license patents that complement internal innovation or to engage organizations which may be practicing a particular technology. Figure 7. Published Semiconductor Patent Applications By Country From 1997-201132 Semiconductor Patent Applications Published 25000 20000 15000 10000 5000 0 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005 Year PRC Europe Japan the semiconductor industry will likely continue to increase over time, driven by the growing complexity of the chips and embedded software, rising R&D costs, the greater number of parties who seek to extract licensing revenues from such chip development activity, as well as the growing sophistication of the licensing parties in extracting returns from their IP. As the semiconductor industry’s growth keeps moderating toward world GDP growth rates, there will be downward pressure on royalty rates or settlement amounts associated with the licensing or crosslicensing of IP. For patent licensing, this trend could further accelerate if the enforcement regime in the United States or other major geographies such as the European union would be weakened. To counter this type of price erosion, licensing companies need to improve their offerings and provide more IP value to their customers, whether in form of broader design IP offerings or larger and stronger patent portfolios. Regulatory changes, judicial action, and economic shifts in manufacturing centers—relative to product end markets—may impact the way licenses are being structured, but the fundamental need for licensing at all levels will remain. In addition, having the appropriate infrastructure to ensure compliance with such license agreements will continue to be important for any semiconductor company. 227 les Nouvelles 32. World Intellectual Property Organization IP Statistics Data Center: http://ipstatsdb.wipo.org/ipstatv2/ipstats/patentsSearch; data obtained on September 15, 2013. 33. http://www.openinnovation.net/. 34. Good Practices In Open Innovation: http://www.iriweb.org/ Public_Site/RTM/free/Good_Practices_in_Open_Innovation.aspx. Semiconductor Licensing Trends With a shift towards a greater proportion of software contributing to functionality of end products, it is becoming more important to consider where technology will be implemented and used given the different level of software patent protection from one country to another. This can have an important impact on the decision to patent and license certain technologies. However, with software playing an increasingly important role, the IP community will be asked to provide adequate IP protection for software related inventions. As such, patenting software related inventions continues to be important and should be considered as part of comprehensive IP strategies. Although detectability of patented technology in the semiconductor industry is increasingly challenging, new methodologies are continually being developed and the testing and the reverse engineering industry continues to flourish. However, it is important to understand and consider the level of difficulty and cost involved in detecting evidence-of-use for technologies when pursuing patent protection. International With the changes that are occurring in the geographic distribution of semiconductor activity, as well as frequent changes in U.S. and international patent law, portfolio development strategies need to be continuously evaluated and refined to effectively support business objectives. Working with experienced practitioners in each relevant region for business and legal advice will inform decision making and allow companies to capitalize on opportunities while minimizing risks. With any cross-border licensing transaction, the parties need to agree on what country’s laws will control and how and where any disputes will be resolved. Even if the parties agree on U.S. law with disputes resolved within the country’s court system, pitfalls may remain. Treaties providing for enforcement of foreign court decisions do not exist among all countries, and even where they exist, in some countries the provisions of those treaties may be enforced in unexpected ways. As more large companies in the semiconductor value chain are scattered around the globe, bigger players gain leverage to demand that the laws and courts of their own country govern licensing transactions. Companies without experienced countryspecific in-house legal and IP resources should seek the advice of local counsel. Although obtaining such advice could add to the cost and time required for a transaction, it can help avoid unexpected outcomes in the future. Conclusions The semiconductor industry has a long history of IP licensing activities and remains a hotbed of activity. This article has outlined some of the challenges and opportunities facing companies in this evolving landscape. Exciting opportunities result from the increased integration of more functionality into and on top of semiconductor products, e.g. in the form of firmware or software. New disruptive technologies continue to emerge, along with new geographic markets and companies based in those markets. Changes in the economic, legislative and political environment have to be carefully tracked given the importance of IP and the long lead times to develop high-value portfolios. Companies both large and small have to constantly evaluate and adjust their intellectual property strategies to stay relevant and benefit from these developments. ■ December 2013 228 Software Trends Trends And Observations In Software By Susan O. Goldsmith, Ian G. DiBernardo, Frank L. Bernstein, Scott Smedresman, Michael Gulliford, Richard P.W. Stobbe I. Introduction and Background E ven for those who experienced IBM 80 column punch card formats, it is becoming difficult to remember the days before smartphones and tablet computers. In fact the iPhone® launched in 2007 and the iPad® just a few years ago in 2010, each taking advantage of new hardware capabilities and spawning an entire new industry. We only thought software was ubiquitous before 2007. Now we find software applications (“apps”) on the interactive screens, which are rapidly replacing passive view-only sets. Current trends in the software industry are heavy development of apps, and related implementations of cloud computing, particularly for smartphones and other mobile devices. This paper does not attempt to address all aspects of this evolution in detail, but focuses on a few critical items of case law and its implications for software app technology intellectual property and licensing. We conclude this paper by itemizing four trends that we feel are key to this arena. Apps are being developed and used in a variety of ways and across industries, not merely in consumerfacing applications, but also in industry and retail. These trends are driven, at least in part, by: 1. The desire for increased productivity and flex- ibility, particularly in light of the still strug gling economy; 2. Response to our mobile society and workforce; 3. Low cost of entry and availability of enabling technology (e.g., mobile communications with robust broadband service); 4. Value of collected data and concommittant privacy issues; 5. Value for brand owners; and 6. Changes in patent monetization. Here we focus on a few of these issues, namely uncertainty and risk related to the current state of case law and privacy. A. Uncertainty/Risks to the Industry 1. United States: Navigating the Software Patent Eligibility Minefield in the U.S.: From Alappat to Ultramercial II The landscape for patent-eligible software patents 229 les Nouvelles under 35 U.S.C. § 101 has changed dramatically since the Federal Circuit’s 1994 decision, In re Alappat.1 In Alappat, arguably the Federal Circuit’s broadest holding, the court stated that a general purpose computer, programmed with specific software, becomes a special purpose computer, a new machine for purposes of patentability.2 Patent practitioners were able to write their specifications and claims fairly straightforwardly for years after Alappat. More recently, however, a number of Federal Circuit decisions, with Supreme Court decisions, such as In re Bilski, sprinkled among them, have obscured the seemingly clean, broad definition of software patent eligibility. Patent practitioners have had to consider algorithm-related issues that seem to periodically disappear, then reappear. Litigants asserting software patents that have issued during this time must navigate the same issues. The Federal Circuit’s recent en banc decision, CLS Bank Int’l v. Alice Corp. Pty,3 did not help as much as hoped. Judge Lourie, who wrote the plurality opinion in CLS Bank, stated in that opinion that reliance on Alappat was a fallacy.4 The Federal Circuit’s ruling in Ultramercial, Inc. v. Hulu LLC (Ultramercial II)5 suggests a potential return to Alappat, if only because Chief Judge Rader, who cited Alappat in a partial concurrence in CLS Bank, relied on Alappat in the unanimous holding in Ultramercial II.6 The above recent decisions require patent practitioners to flesh out computerized methods and hardware, both in the claims and specification, to a substantial extent. Algorithm-based steps or elements need to be ever more detailed. Ultimately, this may be the appropriate approach from the standpoint 1. 33 F.3d 1526 (Fed. Cir. 1994). 2. Id. at 1545. 3. 2013 WL 1920941 (Fed. Cir. 2013). 4. 2013 WL 1920941 at 20. 5. 2013 WL 3111303 (Fed. Cir. 2013) (Re-issued opinion; original at 657 F.3d 1323 (Fed. Cir. 2011), vacated, 132 S. Ct. 2431 (2012)). 6. Judge Lourie, also on the panel in Ultramercial II, wrote a concurring opinion, but squared the decision with his own approach rather than endorse Alappat. Software Trends of novelty and non-obviousness. However, despite judicial protestations to the contrary, the path to obtaining and enforcing software patents must go through patent-eligibility. In CLS Bank, the Federal Circuit held method, computer readable medium, and system claims, relating to a computerized trading platform used for conducting financial transactions, to be patent-ineligible. Judge Lourie’s plurality opinion, which received the most support, stated that none of the claims in question should be patent-eligible because the claims—even the system claims—were co-extensive with the abstract idea they embodied.7 The Lourie plurality reasoned that, while claims to computers and computer hardware were and still are eligible for patent protection, “in current times, we are not examining the patent eligibility of computers or computer hardware as such, but computers that have routinely been adapted by software consisting of abstract ideas, and claimed as such, to do all sorts of tasks that formerly were performed by humans.”8 Ultimately, in holding the claims not to be patent-eligible, Judge Lourie cited the broad functional nature of the claims, even of the system claims, and their “striking level of generality.”9 In their partial concurring opinion, Chief Judge Rader and Judge Moore agreed that the computer readable medium and method claims should not be patent-eligible, focusing on whether the claimed steps were “inherently” required in a way “that anyone wanting to use the natural law would necessarily use those steps.”10 In contrast, the judges, citing Alappat with approval, said that the system claims should be patent-eligible, stating that the reasoning in Alappat was completely consistent with Supreme Court precedent.11 In Ultramercial II, the Federal Circuit held method claims relating to the use of advertising as currency in media content websites to be patent-eligible. Although the method claims did not recite structure, the court found that many of the steps would require intricate and complex computer programming since they required implementation through a cyber environment.12 The court referred to Alappat’s discussion of programming of a general purpose computer to create, in effect, a special purpose computer to 7. Id. 8. Id. at 19. 9. Id. at 18. 10. Id. at 37-39. 11. Id. at 43. 12. 2013 WL 3111303 at 15. perform particular functions.13 Moreover, although the patent in question did not specify a particular mechanism for delivering media content (e.g. FTP, email or real-time streaming) this breadth and lack of specificity did not render the claimed subject matter impermissibly abstract.14 Accordingly, the court held the claims at issue to be patent-eligible. In a concurring opinion, Judge Lourie did not address the applicability of Alappat. Instead, going back to the plurality opinion in CLS Bank, the judge noted that the patent in question had, at its heart, the ■ Susan O. Goldsmith, abstract idea of using adSorinRand LLP vertising as an exchange Partner or currency.15 However, East Brunswick, NJ Judge Lourie also noted E-mail: sgoldsmith@ that additional limitasorinrand.com tions in the claims, reciting how that idea is ■ Ian G. DiBernardo, implemented, “narrow, Strook & Strook & Lavan LLP, confine, or otherwise Partner, IP and tie down the claim so Technology Group, that, in practical terms, New York, NY it does not cover the full E-mail: [email protected] abstract idea itself.” 16 ■ Frank L. Bernstein, On this basis, Judge Kenyon & Kenyon LLP Lourie was able to join Partner in the holding. Palo Alto, CA, USA These two recent deE-mail: [email protected] cisions leave the Fed■ Scott Smedresman, eral Circuit’s reliance SorinRand LLP, on Alappat unclear, but Senior Associate, appear to provide parEast Brunswick, NJ allel paths to subject E-mail: ssmedresman@ matter eligibility, even sorinrand.com of method claims in software patents. Guid■ Michael Gulliford, ance still is lacking as Soryn IP Group LLC, to how detailed a claim CEO/Managing Member, must be, relative to the Jersey City, NJ abstract idea it employs E-mail: mgulliford@sorynipgroup or implements, in order ■ Richard P.W. Stobbe, to define patent eligible Field Law, subject matter, or to difSenior Associate, ferentiate helpfully beCalgary, Alberta, Canada tween meaningful and E-mail: [email protected] 13. Id. at 13. 14. Id. at 16. 15. Id. at 18. 16. Id. December 2013 230 Software Trends meaningless hardware limitations, whether express or inherent. The court in CLS Bank does not indicate the type or number of substantive limitations in a patent claim which would add “significantly more” to a basic principle or abstract idea, so that the claim is patent-eligible.17 Instead, the court only indicates that an implied requirement for computer implementation does not suffice.18 The court in Ultramercial II admits that it does not define the level of programming complexity necessary for a computer-implemented method to be patent-eligible.19 CLS Bank and Ultramercial II are difficult to reconcile. On the one hand, CLS Bank seems to say that sufficiently detailed algorithmic recitation in claims can be enough for patent-eligibility. On the other hand, Ultramercial II seems to say that extensive requirement, express or implied, for computer involvement can be enough. Overall, though, the safest way of achieving patent eligibility seems to be through increased algorithmic specificity in the claims, with corresponding ties to hardware in the specification. In the claims, reciting algorithms in more detail will be more likely to provide the “meaningful limitations” that the Federal Circuit seems to be looking for. In the specification, strong ties between the inventive concept and hardware can help counter the notion that a claim preempts an abstract idea. In this regard, a common theme among the several opinions in CLS Bank was reliance on the specification. Although certain judicial opinions conflate patent eligibility under 35 U.S.C. § 101 with patentability under 35 U.S.C. §§ 102 and 103, others maintain them as separate hurdles to patent validity. The latter approach would seemingly make software patents subject to the same statutory scheme as other patents and would likely simplify the analysis for both patent applicants and patent litigants—both patentees and accused infringers. Regardless of which approach ultimately prevails, patent practitioners would be prudent to include relatively more algorithmic detail in the claims. 2. Canada: A Developing Standard for Software Patent Eligibility In Canada, patent eligibility of software is also in need of some clarification. On the face of it, computer-implemented inventions are patent eligible according to the Canadian Federal Court of Appeal in 17. 2013 WL 1920941 at 8. 18. Id. at 15. 19. 2013 WL 3111303 at 16. 231 les Nouvelles Canada (Attorney General) v. Amazon.com, Inc.20 and according to the Commissioner’s published guidance on this topic. In the Amazon decision, the Court sent Amazon’s application for its “one-click method of Internet shopping” back to the Commissioner for examination based on purposive construction. The Commissioner had flatly refused to grant patents for any business methods; however, there is no Canadian jurisprudence that determines conclusively that a business method is patent ineligible. The Court in Amazon also clarified that business methods may be patentable, though a “mere scientific principle or abstract theorem” cannot be the subject of a patent under the Patent Act (Canada). Lastly, Amazon clarified that there is no strict physicality requirement, but an applicant must show something more than mere “practical application” for the application to be granted. A revised version of Chapter 16 of the Manual of Patent Office Practice (MOPOP)21 dealing with Computer-Implemented Inventions was published in October 2010, before the guidance of the Court in Amazon. In March 2013, the Canadian Patent Office published an Examination Practice Notice relating to Computer-Implemented Inventions22 to incorporate the Amazon principles. The guidelines contained in the Practice Notice do guide examiners but it is safe to say that the guidelines are not universally accepted by practitioners as a correct or complete statement of the current law in this area. Therefore, applicants in Canada should exercise caution when relying on MOPOP Chapter 16 and the latest examination guidelines. For example, the guidelines state that “A good indicator that a claim is directed to statutory subject-matter is that it provides a technical solution to a technical problem.” However, the Court in Amazon rejected the “technological nature” test as being an “unhelpful distraction.” In conclusion, applicants in Canada should bear in mind not only the published examination guidelines of the Patent Office, but also the Court’s directions in Amazon, as well as the Supreme Court of Canada decisions relating to purposive patent construction in 20. 2011 FCA 328. 21. The Manual of Patent Office Practice (MOPOP) is a guide published by the Canadian Patent Office for patent examiners, applicants, and practitioners regarding the examination practices of the office. 22. PN 2013-03 [http://www.cipo.ic.gc.ca/eic/site/cipointernetinternetopic.nsf/vwapj/PN2013-03-eng.pdf/$file/PN2013-03-eng. pdf ]. Software Trends Free World Trust v. Électro-Santé Inc.23 and Whirlpool Corp. v. Camco Inc.24 Computer-implemented and software inventions face hurdles—and some uncertainty—outside the U.S. and Canada, too. For example, technical character is a fundamental requirement for the grant of a European patent. To have technical character an invention generally must relate to a technical field, be concerned with a technical problem and have technical features. “Technicality” in this context is not always clear, clouding the issue of patent-eligibility. Exacerbating the problem with the uncertainty surrounding technicality, when assessing inventive step, the European Patent Office applies the so-called “problem-solution” approach. In general, this approach involves identifying each of the technical and non-technical features of a claim. Only those features that contribute to the technical character of the claim, either independently or in combination with other features, are considered when assessing the technical solution of a technical problem for inventive step. In the face of this global uncertainty, one thing is certain: applicants filing for patent protection in multiple jurisdictions must strive to harmonize the various standards, preparing both robust disclosures and claims specifically tailored to address each of the standards. B. Mobile App Data Privacy 1. A Look at Canada In Canada, privacy is governed by a matrix of Federal and Provincial laws which govern personal information handling by government, business, non-profits as well as sector-specific laws applicable to personal health information. Generally speaking, the enforcement process is complaints-driven. Affected individuals may initiate complaints with one of the Provincial or Federal privacy commissioners. However, as in the United States, mobile app privacy issues are drawing the attention of regulators who are actively pursuing violators through their own investigative powers, rather than waiting for a specific consumer complaint to be filed. Earlier this year, the Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada initiated a complaint against WhatsApp Inc. (“WhatsApp”), a California corporation, pursuant to subsection 11(2) of the Personal 23. 2000 SCC 66 (CanLII), 2000 SCC 66, [2000] 2 S.C.R. 1024. 24. 2000 SCC 67 (CanLII), 2000 SCC 67, [2000] 2 S.C.R. 1067. Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (Canada). The resulting report25 shows the extent to which the Comissioner’s office cooperated with Dutch privacy authorities to investigate the owner of the popular “WhatsApp Messenger,” a cloud-based cross-platform mobile messaging app allowing the exchange of messages for iOS, Blackberry, and Android platforms. The Commissioner in Canada launched an exhaustive review of the privacy aspects of this service including the company’s information-handling procedures, the collection of more information than was necessary, the potential for privacy breaches, and the lack of encryption. WhatsApp did work with the Commissioner’s office to resolve many of the privacy concerns. This investigation also shows the extent to which international privacy watchdogs will work together to launch an investigation that concerns personal information that crosses international borders. Last year, the Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner of Alberta, the Federal Privacy Commissioner and the Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner for British Columbia jointly issued a publication directed to mobile app developers entitled “Seizing Opportunity: Good Privacy Practices for Developing Mobile Apps” (October 2012).26 Earlier in 2013, a group of 19 privacy enforcement authorities—including the Privacy Commissioner of Canada—engaged in a so-called “international Internet Privacy Sweep” to assess the transparency and clarity of online privacy policies. In its published findings, the Commissioner did not shy away from shaming Canadian companies whose online privacy policies fell below the Commissioner’s standards. These developments signal a continuing trend towards regulators’ interest and vigilance in this area. 2. A Look at the United States Unlike Canada and many other jurisdictions, the United States has no comprehensive national data privacy laws applicable to businesses.27 National industry-specific regulations exist, but there is no omnibus federal law governing how businesses collect, secure and use data, or even on how businesses tell the public about their data practices. 25. PIPEDA Report of Findings #2013-001 [ http://www.priv. gc.ca/cf-dc/2013/2013_001_0115_e.asp ]. 26. [http://www.priv.gc.ca/information/pub/gd_app_201210_e. pdf ]. 27. Laws and regulations applicable to government law enforcement and other agencies are outside the scope of this white paper. December 2013 232 Software Trends Historically, this minimally regulated area did not attract much public attention. If they exist at all, the privacy policies currently on mobile apps and websites are commonly presented in dense legal jargon. Without regulations or even clear guidelines, presentation of these policies has become fragmented, and they are challenging for consumers to understand. With the rise of the app economy and public attention being drawn to the increased prominence of mobile apps in everyday life, things have started to change. The U.S. privacy regulations that are on the books, such as the California Online Privacy Protection Act (CalOPPA), are starting to be enforced by more aggressive regulators. New legislation governing data collection by apps is being debated in Congress. As discussed below, identifying this as an area of need, stakeholders in the app marketplace, in cooperation with federal policymakers, have released a set of voluntary guidelines intended to simplify app privacy policies and provide clearer, more understandable disclosures to consumers. As the app economy continues to rapidly expand, this trend in increased attention to mobile privacy is only likely to increase. a.) Privacy Regulations and Practices in the United States National privacy regulations applicable to companies in the United States are generally industry-specific. The Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act of 1998 (COPPA) governs how firms may collect, use and share data on children under the age of 13. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPPA) governs medical data. The Gramm-Leach Bliley Act governs financial institutions. Although some regulations require firms to publish these policies in public documents, the scope of these laws are limited, and apply only to a small set of mobile apps. Aside from this patchwork of federal laws, state privacy laws also govern how apps collect and use data. Effective as of July 1, 2004, CalOPPA requires the operator of an online business that collects personal information about California residents to post a privacy policy documenting certain information collection practices. The federal laws are limited in applicability, and while CalOPPA applies to a broad array of websites and apps, a study conducted by TRUSTe found that only 5 percent of apps actually had privacy policies. b.) Increased Enforcement and Attention Despite this historic lack of attention in the 233 les Nouvelles U.S. to privacy regulations, things have been changing. Consumer awareness of data collection practices has increased, and the attention of regulators has followed. Although the law passed in California in 2003, CalOPPA had not been widely enforced. However, commencing in 2012, the California Attorney General Kamala Harris has taken an active role in raising the prominence of mobile privacy issues and in enforcing California’s law. In February of 2012, Ms. Harris’ office announced that it had reached an agreement with the major app marketplaces—Apple, Google, Amazon, Hewlett-Packard, Research in Motion (Blackberry) and Microsoft—to include a requirement on their platforms for apps to submit or identify their privacy policies. The platforms also agreed to facilitate reports from users on apps that do not identify their privacy policies, and to implement a process for the platforms to respond to instances of non-compliance. Facebook subsequently agreed to this program. In June of 2012, Attorney General Harris announced the creation of a Privacy and Enforcement Protection Unit within the Attorney General’s office, and in October of 2012 letters were sent to approximately 100 top apps, alleging non-compliance with CalOPPA. Under the letter, the companies were given 30 days to conspicuously post an app privacy policy. Then, in December of 2012, the Attorney General filed a lawsuit against Delta Airlines (Delta), claiming that Delta’s app did not comply with CalOPPA, and that Delta failed to remedy this non-compliance after receipt of a warning letter. The case against Delta was ultimately dismissed, as the court held that the application of CalOPPA’s to the airline industry was pre-empted by federal aviation laws; however, the lawsuit was the first ever brought by the Attorney General under CalOPPA, and signals a greater attention by that office to software privacy issues. The New Jersey Attorney General has also become involved in enforcing software privacy, recently reaching a one million dollar settlement in a case against PulsePoint for allegedly circumventing controls and placing cookies on users’ computers after the users had elected to block cookies in their browser’s settings. In addition to state-level enforcement, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has been similarly active in policing software privacy. Over the Software Trends years, the FTC has brought numerous cases for violations of COPPA, some resulting in heavy fines. However, the FTC has expanded its role beyond enforcing industr y specific regulations and into the broader mobile software marketplace. The FTC is charged with protecting consumers against deceptive acts and practices, and it has used this authority to take an active role in bringing legal action against firms that did not live up to their own privacy policies, based on the claim that such a failure is a deceptive consumer practice. Companies like Google, Facebook and Path have faced lawsuits from the FTC, all based on the claim that these companies did not follow their own privacy policies. In addition to these enforcement actions, the FTC has issued guidelines for mobile app developers on how to address the FTC’s privacy concerns. In March of 2012, the FTC released a report titled “Protecting Consumer Privacy in an Era of Rapid Change: Recommendations for Businesses and Policymakers.” In the report, the FTC laid out the concept of “privacy by design”—a process where developers consider data collection, use and sharing at each stage of the development process. According to the FTC, following these guidelines helps privacy concerns stay prominent during development, assists in the preparation of appropriate privacy policies and better ensures data security in final mobile apps. In its first enforcement action based on these principles, the FTC brought suit against HTC America, claiming that the company failed to take reasonable steps to secure the software it developed for its mobile devices. In a first, HTC’s settlement with the FTC required the release of a software security patch to address the issues identified by the FTC. Congress has also turned its attention to mobile software privacy. Introduced in May of 2013, the proposed Application Privacy, Protection, and Security Act of 2013 (APPS Act) would require mobile apps that collect personal data to provide notice to users of the app’s privacy policy, and would require the app to obtain consent to the notice prior to the collection of data. The proposed APPS Act would empower the FTC to issue more precise regulations on how notice and consent would be effectuated, and the FTC would be charged with enforcing the law against those who do not comply. c.) Multistakeholder Consensus on App Transparency In addition to the attention of these regulators and Congress, stakeholders in the app industry have focused on compliance with the current legal framework while simplifying privacy policies and enhancing consumer understanding. It is generally agreed that even when apps have privacy policies, they are difficult for consumers to understand, and the visual aspects of their implementation varies greatly from app to app. In a process hosted by the National Telecommunications & Information Administration (NTIA) of the U.S. Department of Commerce, industry players recently reached an agreement on a voluntary code of conduct for mobile software privacy policies. These stakeholders included the Application Developers Alliance, which represents more than 20,000 developers, as well as the Computer and Communications Industry Association, CTIA-The Wireless Association, the Online Publishers Association, the Software and Information Industry Association, the Marketing Research Association, the Internet Commerce Coalition, Intuit, Lookout, TRUSTe, Verizon, and AT&T. The final guidelines were issued on June 24, 2013. Although voluntary, these guidelines lay the foundation for the first nationally recognized convention on the implementation and formatting of app privacy policies. Under the newly issued code, apps would identify which categories of information the app is collecting from a standard list that includes biometrics, browser history, phone or text logs, contacts, financial information, health information, location, and user files. The app would also identify the categories of third parties with whom the information is shared, referring to a standard list that includes advertising networks, carriers, data resellers, data analytics providers, government entities, operating systems and platforms, other apps and social networks. All of the categories on each list would be identified in the app, with a “yes” or “no” designation next to each category, meant to identify whether or not the app is collecting or sharing that particular category. The long-form policy would also be identified in the suggested visualization. Several participants suggested visual user interfaces for this proposed framework. The interface below, introduced by the Future of December 2013 234 Software Trends Privacy Forum, implements the code by grayingout the categories of data not being collected, as well as the categories of third-parties with whom information is not shared. A link to the full privacy policy appears at the bottom of the interface. This code is not intended to replace long-form policies which may be required under laws like CalOPPA; however, the short-form notices are intended to enhance and simplify the disclosures that these apps are already making. With the approval of this voluntary industry guideline, the mobile marketplace has its first nationally recognized convention for presenting privacy policies to consumers. These guidelines will be rolled out to the industry in the coming months, and are expected to gain wide adoption. d.) A Look at the Future The attention being received by mobile privacy issues is increasing. As more and more consumers rely on mobile apps for their everyday needs, regulators will continue to give this issue their attention. State and federal legislation will likely continue to be introduced in the months and years ahead, but consensus in these forums can be elusive. During this time, the app industry will be encouraging developers to implement the new Code of Conduct issued by the NTIA, and continue to foster an environment of selfregulation among industry participants. II. Predictions for the Software Industry App development in general raises many intellectual property and licensing issues, including: • Whether the software should be proprietary or licensed from a third party •Customization and control or access to source code, source code escrows 235 les Nouvelles •Royalty structures •Maintenance obligations •Use of Software as a Service (SaaS), Platform as a Service (PaaS) and/or Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) •Information security •Place of development and law applying to developer team •Copyright ownership, registration and enforcement •Trademark ownership, cross-licensing, brand penetration and brand extensions •Terms of use and customer data privacy policies •Obligations imposed on vendors offering programs through proprietary platforms (often on-line stores). A. The Future of Software Patent Monetization: Trends & Predictions With the topic of “patent monetization” now making routine appearances in the popular press, it is easy to forget that the practice has only recently gained widespread traction. Whereas the patent monetizers of old were billion dollar corporations keen on extracting value from their vast patent portfolios, the new faces of patent monetization—inventors, universities, small/mid-cap companies and non-practicing entities—are vast and varied. At base, however, is the understanding that patents are no longer just trophies from the United States Patent & Trademark office (“USPTO”). Rather, they are liquid assets of enormous potential value. A key weapon in the arsenal of many patent monetizers is the software patent, for several reasons. For one, several Federal Circuit decisions in the 1990s upholding the patentability of software led to the USPTO issuing significantly more software patents—a trend that has continued. Based on a recent survey of patents issued in 2012, alone, 40,000 such patents related to software. Another reason that software patents are frequently a monetizer’s instrument of choice is that they are infringed on a scale unlike any other patent subject matter class. While patents covering (for example) medical devices or pharmaceuticals are typically only infringed by other medical device or pharmaceutical companies, software patent infringement usually spans industries. The owner of a software patent for managing inventory, for instance, could attempt to license that patent to nearly every size company, in every industry, with an inventory management system. Such licensing fees can easily total in the tens of millions. Software Trends And so it is that software patent holders—particularly holders of software patents related to business methods—have turned to monetizing their patents on a scale not seen before now. With the growing outcry over “patent trolls” and their alleged abuse of the patent system gaining steam, what does the future of patent monetization hold for software patents? We offer several predictions. 1. Trend Number 1: Monetizing Software Patents in Court will be More Difficult and Less Profitable Than it was Once While other countries have banned software patents entirely, it is doubtful such a far reaching ban will be adopted in the United States. What appears certain, however, is that monetizing software patents will be more difficult and less profitable than it once was. Why? Because the America Invents Act (“AIA”) and uncertain climate surrounding software patentability are disrupting the patent monetizer’s preferred business model: hiring contingency counsel and extracting substantial settlements from defendants facing substantial damages exposure and staggering defense costs. a.) The AIA Will Make Litigation-Based Monetization Campaigns More Difficult and Less Profitable Fully implemented as of March 16, 2013, the AIA introduced sweeping changes to our nation’s patent laws, including several provisions that will undoubtedly make it more difficult to successfully monetize patents in district court. In addition to greatly expanding the universe of prior art that defendants may use to invalidate a patent, the AIA gave defendants a powerful new tool: several “post-grant” proceedings known as Post Grant Review (“PGR”), Inter Partes Review (“IPR”) and Covered Business Method Review (“CBMR”). Each of these are trial-like proceedings that a defendant sued for patent infringement can institute in the USPTO, where the relaxed standard of proof makes it easier to prove invalidity than in district Court. Proving the power of these proceedings, the first CBMR decision invalidated a business method patent that, prior to the decision, had been ruled infringed to the tune of more than $390 million. But perhaps more significant from the perspective of the software patent monetizer, the AIA will undoubtedly make litigation-based patent monetization less profitable. Although the anti-joinder provisions of the AIA (which prohibit one patent holder from suing a large group of defendants in one court and in one case, with the payment of a single filing fee) have received much attention, the more significant game changer may be the introduction of PGR, IPR and CBMR. These proceedings are expensive, and if instituted by a defendant, introduce substantial costs that a patent monetizer pursuing litigation has never before had to consider or absorb. The result is undoubtedly a dent to the bottom line, either directly, through significantly enhanced litigation costs, or indirectly, through increased contingency fees that counsel or litigation funders will no doubt require to include the costs of post-grant proceedings within their retainer agreements. b.) The Uncertainties Specific To Software Patents Will Make Litigation-Based Monetization Campaigns Less Profitable Beyond the general effects of the AIA, the software patent monetizer must also confront growing uncertainties as to software patentability, and the effects that these uncertainties will have on the bottom line. Indeed, the inability of courts to articulate clear rules for determining whether a software invention constitutes patent-eligible subject matter means that the validity of many software patents cannot be known with any certainty until a court decides the issue. And if the Federal Circuit’s CLS Bank decision has taught anything, it is that the line between patentable software and a non-patentable abstract idea is substantially blurred even among our nation’s judges. In the end, these developments will mean reduced profits for many software patent monetizers, with drastic reductions in some instances. This is because defendants will succeed with increasing frequency in invalidating software patents in post-grant proceedings, and also because new economic considerations will pinch the software monetizer. That is, in today’s market, the majority of patent monetizers rely on (a) contingency counsel, willing to incur some or all of the hard costs of the litigation, and/or (b) litigation funders, willing to fund patent cases for a percentage of the recovery. But to account for the increased costs of asserting patents in the post-AIA world, and also the significant uncertainties surrounding software patentability, reputable contingency counsel or litigation funders are likely going to demand a significantly higher percentage of a case’s potential recovery, resulting in far less profits to the patent holder. In the case of software patent holders, this is not good news. December 2013 236 Software Trends 2. Trend Number 2: It will be Harder and Less Profitable to Sell Many Software Patents Of course not all monetizers desire to assert their patent portfolios. A great percentage of monetizers also seek to sell. While valuable patents still command a premium at sale or auction, the same likely cannot be said about many software patents, particularly business method patents. Although there are obviously exceptions to the rule, the uncertainties regarding software patent validity and the increased costs and difficulties asserting such patents, are destined to make selling such patents more difficult. And where purchasers are interested, it is to be expected that significant discounts will be required to consummate any sale. 3. Trend Number 3: The Rise of the Super Monetizer Perhaps counterintuitive considering the forecast discussed above, all is not lost for the software patent monetizer with deep pockets and substantial, higher-quality portfolios. We will call that entity a “super monetizer.” In the post-AIA world, the “super monetizer” will create leverage by asserting three or four patents in each case filed, potentially even discouraging defendants from filing post-grant proceedings in light of the substantial costs required to litigate several such proceedings simultaneously. This leverage may be increased where the super monetizer has been able to acquire a patent portfolio that includes patents in several jurisdictions. The “super monetizer” has deep pockets, so it will also hire the best counsel to litigate post-grant proceedings without turning over significant contingencies in exchange for representation. And by bettering the odds of overcoming the post-grant proceeding hurdle, the “super monetizer” gains significant leverage to extract high value settlements from defendants. Whereas it may make economic sense for defendants to refuse large settlement offers from monetizers before the institution and conclusion of a post-grant proceeding, the same often cannot be said with respect to the patent monetizer who has emerged from such a proceeding with their patent’s validity intact. Thus, as the more 237 les Nouvelles typical variety of monetizer finds that litigation may not be the best option (as discussed below), we can expect to see an uptick in suits brought by “super monetizers.” 4. Trend Number 4: The Rise of Nuisance Campaigns On the other end of the spectrum is the garden variety of software patent monetizer—the owner of one or two patents, without significant funding, who relies on contingency counsel or litigation funders to finance their monetization campaigns. These monetizers will be most impacted by the increased contingencies that the lawyers and litigation funders can be expected to demand in light of the uncertainties that now must be confronted when asserting software patents in court. How will these monetizers confront this new reality? Likely, by turning with increased frequency to out of court campaigns designed to extract smaller sums from large pools of defendants. Such tactics will be borne from necessity—as contingency counsel becomes much more selective in picking cases in the post-AIA world—and considerations of profitability—as monetizers not enthusiastic about leaving their profits in the pockets of attorneys and litigation funders focus instead on out-of-court licensing campaigns. While it surely was not the goal of the AIA or Congress to increase the frequency of these “nuisance campaigns,” that ironically very well may be the result. III. Concluding Remarks App development is becoming a huge industry which is increasingly necessary as websites and formerly off-line functions go mobile. Some issues and concerns are common to all software development projects, but the need for constant refreshment and upgrading puts additional pressure on the team. Data security (on the one hand) and privacy policy transparency for users (on the other) are getting increasing scrutiny. Finally, the patentability of many software programs is still uncertain. That fundamental question, coupled with provisions of the AIA making it harder to bring claims, brings new challenges to monetization of the inventions. ■ Mobile and Consumer Electronics Trends In Mobile And Consumer Electronics By Ram Menon and Kevin Spivak I. Mobile Industry & Business Trends T he wide adoption of smartphones and tablets in recent years is undeniable. In the second quarter of 2013, the total global install base of smartphones and tablets is predicted to exceed those of PCs.1 Mobile is more than just the latest fad in tech innovation; it is fundamentally reshaping marketplaces, business models and operating models. This year, Yankee Group values the market for mobile and connected devices at U.S. $485 billion.2 By 2017, that number will have increased to surpass U.S. $919 billion—growing at a much quicker pace than previously thought.3 Mobile communication is continuing to replace traditional fixed communications across the world.4 This is evidenced by the fact that as of December 2012, 13 percent of all Internet traffic originated from mobile devices.5 Every business is largely embracing a variety of mobile initiatives 1. See Mary Meeker, 2012 Internet Trends, http://kpcb.com/ insights/2012-internet-trends (May 30, 2012), Slideshare. 2. See Boris Metodiev et al., Yankee Group’s Market Vision Report. Mobile and Connected Devices: A Market Moving at the Speed of Light, July 9, 2013. 3. Yankee Group predicts “the drivers of growth during the next two to three years will include exploding machine-to-machine opportunities, new entrants in the mobile OS wars, surging popularity of tablets, OEMs recognizing the potential of emerging markets and enterprise service providers working to solve the Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) puzzle. See Yankee Group’s Market Vision Report titled “Mobile and Connected Devices: A Market Moving at the Speed of Light,” July 9, 2013. 4. Google’s YouTube is now delivering 25 percent of its content to mobile devices and the figure is likely to rise in tandem with mobile broadband subscriptions. In Korea, for example, which has 91 mobile broadband subscribers for every 100 people, YouTube’s mobile delivery is closer to 50 percent, according to Shiva Rajaraman, YouTube’s director of product management. See Tofel, K., Future of mobile: 5 takeaways from Mobilize 2012. Retrieved September 7, 2013 from http://gigaom.com/2012/09/24/futureof-mobile-5-takeaways-from-mobilize-2012/. 5. See Mary Meeker, 2012 Internet Trends, http://kpcb.com/ insights/2012-internet-trends (May 30, 2012), Slideshare. 6. As of September 2012, Square is processing $8 billion on an annualized basis, up from $1 billion a year ago; and 35 million Americans have completed purchases using Square. See Tofel, K., Future of mobile: 5 takeaways from Mobilize 2012. Retrieved September 7, 2013 from http://gigaom.com/2012/09/24/futureof-mobile-5-takeaways-from-mobilize-2012/. that allows for increased productivity and effective engagement of customers.6 The introduction of LTE services along with the availability of improved video compression technologies have begun to address the bandwidth and image quality concerns to run advanced high-definition video applications on mobile devices. In addition, as the cost of Bluetooth and WiFi chipsets continues to drop, devices that typically did not have much ■ Ram Menon, intelligence have sudBlackberry, denly become capable of Senior Licensing Counsel, being networked through wireless means. FurtherRolling Meadows, IL more, several natural user E-mail: [email protected] interfaces such as voice ■ Kevin Spivak, and gesture are also creGreenblum and Bernstein PLC, ating new modes of user engagement. Society in Of Counsel general is trending toReston, VA wards connectivity everyE-mail: [email protected] where and some form of computing embedded in every device around us. Mike Brinker and Shehryar Khan of Deloitte Consulting LLP, in a recent report, have identified four forces that are taking shape, defining the new face of mobile: Convergence, Ubiquity, Transparency, and Extending Reality. Convergence implies having a centralized, connected, always-with-us hub for services, information, entertainment, and convenience across our personal and professional lives. Ubiquity means virtually everything and everyone we interact with will most likely soon have the potential to be wired by containing embedded sensors and mobile technologies that allow new and advanced tracking of and interaction with physical things. Transparency involves unlocking new use cases for commerce, back-office, and personal lives by making different operations a user-free interaction. Extending reality involves moving out of games, military and scientific environments into the mainstream—meaning being able to read, hear or feel being delivered based on how you gesture, move, and talk that is sensitive to location and context, with information you need or want in a format that can adapt to the environment December 2013 238 Mobile and Consumer Electronics at hand.7 Although, the concept of “Extending Reality” has been around for a little over a decade now, it sure seems that it has started rapidly approaching a tipping point in the last few years. II. IP Strategy Concerns for a Converged Mobile Space Smartphones, tablets and other mobile devices have essentially come to the market due to the convergence of different technologies including various radio standards (such 3G, 4G, LTE, etc.), audio and video codecs, low power processors and transceivers, media players, Liquid Crystal Display (LCD), digital camera modules and a plethora of mobile applications that are capable of running on such mobile computing platforms. Condensing various complex technologies into a small form factor device leads to making the device open to a greater number of infringement claims from IP owners of individual technologies. This is further evidenced by the increased patent litigation that the mobile and consumer electronics industry has seen in recent years. Additionally, the landscape of the various parties involved in high-tech patent licensing and litigation has also changed. A. Offensive Patent Aggregators & Patent Privateering Recently, we have seen a rise in the number of offensive aggregation entities formed by patent privateers. In the current patent ecosystem, large operating companies accumulate patents in part for defensive purposes. These companies are typically unwilling to use their patents in certain strategic fashions because they fear that the same will be done to them. These patent portfolios help assure patent peace because they assure that any strategic conduct will be met with a similar response—often known as “mutually assured destruction.” However, more recently operating companies have begun to look at a so-called privateering model to monetize their patent portfolio without directly engaging their patents against other operating companies. According to David Balto8 an antitrust attorney, “Privateering is the practice by which established operating companies arm trolls with patents and deploy them to engage in expensive, incessant litigation against competitors. This Trojan horse approach allows companies to accrue the benefits of the egregious troll conduct without incurring any of the risks. And more often than not it is used as a competitive weapon to try 7. See Brinkler, M and Khan, S. Mobile Only (and beyond), 2013 Technology Trends–Disruptors. Retrieved September 8, 2013 from https://documents.deloitte.com/techtrends2013. 239 les Nouvelles to raise costs and dampen competition from rival operating companies.” Some legal scholars have argued that outsourcing of patent litigation might “form part of a scheme to maintain or obtain monopoly power” in violation of Section 2 of the Sherman Act which prohibits monopolization.9 A plaintiff would have to prove that transfers to patent trolls are a part of an exclusionary strategy to obtain or maintain monopoly power by raising rivals costs.10 The first part of the strategy is to create patent-holdup by making FRAND commitments to get patents into a standard and then evading those FRAND commitments through transfers to patent trolls. The second part of the strategy is to raise licensing fees by arming patent trolls that have no incentive to negotiate license rates because they have no risk of patent counter-suits or injury to their reputation. If proven, a private plaintiff could receive an award of treble damages and the government can secure injunctive relief.11 Privateering allows operating companies to evade reputational constraints to raising rivals’ costs and FRAND or other licensing commitments, and provides a method to strategically outsource to Patent Assertion Entities (PAEs) as a hindrance to rivals. Some of the recent examples include the patent transfers from Nokia and Microsoft to MOSAID and that from Ericsson to Unwired Planet. In the MOSAID transaction, Microsoft and Nokia orchestrated a transfer of 2,000 of Nokia’s patents, 1,200 of which were standards essential patents (SEPs) with FRAND commitments, to MOSAID for a nominal fee. Nokia also later transferred portions of its SEP portfolio to PAEs such as Sisvel and Vringo. Transfers like these typically lead to a royalty stacking problem to rivals of such transferors. B. Defensive Patent Aggregators & Patent Defense Service Providers Several defensive entities that enable operating companies to mitigate patent risk from Non-Practicing Entities (NPEs) and Patent Assertion Entities (PAEs) have formed over the last few years. Some examples 8. David Balto is a former policy director of the Federal Trade Commission, attorney-adviser to Chairman Robert Pitofsky, and antitrust lawyer at the U.S. Department of Justice. 9. See http://www.abajournal.com/mobile/mag_article/small_ companies_pick_up_the_cost_of_patent_privateering_litigation. 10. See http://www.patentlyo.com/patent/2013/06/guest-poston-using-the-antitrust-laws-to-police-patent-privateering.html. 11. See http://www.ropesgray.com/~/media/Files/articles/2013/04/Antitrust-Attacks-on-Patent-Assertion-Entities.pdf). Mobile and Consumer Electronics of such entities include the following: Rational Patent Exchange (RPX):12 RPX launched in 2008 has grown to over 150 member companies and provides risk mitigation and cost reduction for any company experiencing NPE litigation. RPX members pay an annual fee (scaled to reflect the size of the member company) that is used to acquire and clear high-risk patents from the open markets and remove members from active litigations. Allied Security Trust (AST):13 AST, launched in 2007, allows member companies to monitor for high technology patents available in the secondary market and provides a system for collaborative purchasing of such assets. Open Innovation Network (OIN):14 OIN, launched in 2005, provides a fully paid-up royalty free license to OIN’s defensive patent pool in exchange for a commitment to forbear litigation around Linux and to cross-license its own patents to other members. OIN holds over 400 U.S. patents and applications and has nearly 600 licensees that are part of its growing community of entities committed to patent non-aggression in open source and Linux. Unified Patents:15 Unified Patents, launched in early 2013, reduces the risk and cost of NPEs on behalf of companies in specific technology areas and uses annual subscription fees to proactively defend against NPE activity through purchase and re-examination of patents. Rather than encourage NPEs through settlement, Unified deters or eliminates future NPE activity, thereby reducing NPE risk and cost. Syndicated Patent Acquisition Corp (SynPat):16 SynPat, launched in early 2013, provides a patent acquisition syndication mechanism that allows companies to acquire licenses to high-risk-patents. License cost to client is SynPat’s purchase price divided by the number of clients in each buying group. SynPat does not have a membership requirement and as a result any operating company can take part in a syndicated acquisition of patents. Patronus:17 Patronus, launched in 2012, provides IPrelated services to operating companies, particularly those subject to lawsuits from NPEs. Patronus seeks to combine the latest developments in data analyt12. http://www.rpxcorp.com/. 13. http://www.alliedsecuritytrust.com/. 14. http://www.openinventionnetwork.com/. 15. http://unifiedpatents.com/. 16. http://synpat.com/. 17. http://gary-gerttula.squarespace.com/about/. ics with new opportunities created by the America Invents Act. Patronus Patent Tracking Service, which is currently in beta testing, uses advanced analytics to identify those patents and applications most likely to be litigated and licensed. III. Legislation Against Trolls In the United States, patent litigation that is traditionally governed by federal law has become quite a nuisance in some instances that state officials have started looking for ways to address the problem. Recently, Vermont and Nebraska have begun using state law to shield local businesses from frivolous lawsuits by patent holders who engage in “baseless harassment” that ends up being costly and destructive litigation. Vermont, a state having a history of political activism by companies, has emerged as a hotbed of anti-troll activism. Vermont’s legislation provides the recipient of a “bad faith” accusation of patent infringement the right to counter-sue in state court. The legal theory being that such bad faith accusations are a violation of Vermont’s consumer protection laws.18 Although currently no specific definition of bad faith is offered, the law offers several criteria that a judge can use to determine whether a threat was made in bad faith. Some of the possible signs of bad faith include a lack of specificity about an alleged infringement, demands for excessive licensing fees, and unreasonably short deadlines for payment. Firms that do not themselves use the technology claimed by the patent are likely to be more vulnerable to accusations of bad-faith litigation. Critics may argue that the legislative push against patent trolls will fail due to preemption, the legal principle that bars states from interfering with the enforcement of federal law. However, this might not be entirely true because federal courts have generally allowed states to police bad-faith patent assertions, but only if the state courts apply the same legal standards that would apply in federal courts. If a patent is obviously invalid or plainly not infringed, then an accusation of bad faith is likely to prevail against the patent holder. However, in situations where the patent is stronger in terms of validity and a clearer case of infringement is shown, then the stricter federal standards may work in the patent holder’s favor. The idea of using state consumer protection law against patent trolls could spread to additional 18. See http://www.leg.state.vt.us/docs/2014/Acts/ACT044.pdf. December 2013 240 Mobile and Consumer Electronics states in the coming months. If the other forty-eight states follow Vermont and Nebraska’s lead, it could make the legal system much less hospitable to nonpracticing entities (NPEs). IV.U.S. Courts are Addressing FRAND Related Issues A. Microsoft v. Motorola (W.D. Wash, No. C10-1823) This is an important case because it is the first decision that sets a framework for determining “fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory” (FRAND) royalty; and provides guidance for calculating the value of a Standards Essential Patent (SEP), affecting (1) SEP holders and potential licensees negotiating FRAND licenses; and (2) patent holders deciding whether to declare a patent essential to a standard. The case involved Motorola’s patents covering IEEE’s 802.11 (WiFi) standards and ISO/IEC’s and ITU’s H.264 video codec standards. Motorola offered to license patents to Microsoft at a proposed royalty of 2.25 percent of the end product (i.e., each Xbox 360, PC/laptop or smartphone implementing the standard). Microsoft did not take a license, sought declaratory relief that Motorola breached its FRAND obligations to the Standards Development Organizations (SDOs), and Motorola sued Microsoft for patent infringement. On April 25, 2013, Judge James L. Robart issued a 207 page opinion. The Judge stated that to decide whether Motorola’s opening offers were in good faith, a fact-finder must be able to compare them with a reasonable RAND royalty rate and because more than one rate could conceivably be RAND, a reasonable royalty range (Order p. 5). A bench trial was held from November 13, 2012‑November 20, 2012 to determine (1) a RAND royalty range for Motorola’s Standards Essential Patents (SEPs) and (2) a specific RAND royalty rate for Motorola’s SEPs. Testimony from 18 witnesses was taken. The Court’s analysis is separated into six parts: •First, the court introduces the parties and their relation to one another; •Second, the court provides background on standards, SSOs and the RAND commitment; •Third, the court develops a framework for assessing RAND terms; •Fourth, the court analyzes the H.264 Standard and Motorola’s H.264 SEPs and their importance to Microsoft’s standard-using products; •Fifth, the court analyzes the 802.11 Standard and Motorola’s 802.11 SEPs and their impor- 241 les Nouvelles tance to Microsoft’s standard-using products; and •Sixth, determines the appropriate RAND royalty rate for Motorola’s SEPs. The Court applied a modified Georgia–Pacific analysis to account for the purpose of the RAND commitment. The court stated that the owner of an SEP is under the obligation to license its patents on RAND terms, whereas the owner of a patent uncommitted to RAND has monopoly power over its patent and may choose to withhold licensing. The court stated further that the hypothetical negotiation almost certainly will not take place in a vacuum: the implementer of a standard will understand that it must take a license from many SEP owners, not just one, before it will be in compliance with its licensing obligations and able to fully implement the standard. This methodology is based on a conventional Georgia-Pacific patent royalty analysis, as modified to give substantial weight to royalty stacking, relative value and public interest considerations. “Economic Guideposts” for assessing RAND terms: Beyond the actual RAND royalty rate determinations, this order is also important for the precedent it sets in how to determine RAND terms for a patent portfolio. Judge Robart lays out what he terms several “economic guideposts”: • A RAND royalty should be set at a level consistent with the SSOs’ goal of promoting widespread adoption of their standards. • In the context of a dispute concerning whether or not a given royalty is RAND, a proper methodology used to determine a RAND royalty should therefore recognize and seek to mitigate the risk of patent hold up that RAND commitments are intended to avoid. • Likewise, a proper methodology for deter mining a RAND royalty should address the risk of royalty stacking by considering the aggregate royalties that would apply if other SEP holders made royalty demands of the implementer. • At the same time, a RAND royalty should be set with the understanding that SSOs include technology intended to create valuable standards... . To induce the creation of valuable standards, the RAND commitment must guarantee that holders of valuable intellectual property will receive reasonable royalties on that property. Mobile and Consumer Electronics • From an economic perspective, a RAND commitment should be interpreted to limit a patent holder to a reasonable royalty on the economic value of its patented tech nology itself, apart from the value associated with incorporation of the patented tech nology into the standard. The court examined the importance of Motorola’s H264 SEPs to the H.264 Standard and to Microsoft’s products. Court concluded that 14 of the 16 Motorola H.264 SEPs are directed only to interlaced video. The court concluded that (1) interlaced video is becoming less prevalent in the marketplace; (2) little evidence suggests that Microsoft products often encounter interlaced video; (3) and Motorola demonstrated that support for interlaced video in coding tools is important to Microsoft so that its products will seamlessly play any video encountered by users. The court determined that Motorola’s H264 SEPs provide only minor importance to the overall functionality of Microsoft’s Windows product. The court determined that Motorola’s H264 SEPs provide only minor importance to the overall functionality of Microsoft’s Xbox product. The court examined the importance of Motorola’s 802.11 SEPs to the 802.11 Standard and to Microsoft’s products. Calculating the RAND royalties, the Court held: • The RAND royalty rate for Motorola’s H.264 SEP portfolio is 0.555 cents per unit; the upper bound of a RAND royalty range for Motorola’s H.264 SEP portfolio is 16.389 cents per unit; and the lower bound is 0.555 cents per unit. This rate and this range are applicable to both Microsoft Windows and Xbox products. For all other Microsoft products using the H.264 Standard, the royalty rate will be the lower bound of 0.555 cents. • The RAND royalty rate for Motorola’s 802.11 SEP portfolio is 3.471 cents per unit; the upper bound of a RAND royalty range for Motorola’s 802.11 SEP portfolio is 19.5 cents per unit; and the lower bound is 0.8 cents per unit. This rate and this range are applicable to Microsoft Xbox products. For all other Microsoft products using the 802.11 Standard, the royalty rate will be the low bound of 0.8 cents. Royalty rate estimated: Initially, Motorola had sought from Microsoft as much as $4 billion a year for use of its standard, essential wireless and video patents, while Microsoft argued its rival deserved about $1 million a year. Judge Robart decided that appropriate payment was about $1.8 million.19 B. Apple v. Motorola (N.D. Illinois, Eastern Division, No. 1:11-cv-08540) The parties filed patent infringement lawsuits in October 2010 after prior licensing negotiations failed. Some of these infringement actions were consolidated in a case before Judge Posner. Apple asserted Motorola infringed claims of four nonstandard-essential patents, while Motorola asserted Apple infringed claims of one patent that was essential to the Universal Mobile Telecommunications Standard (UMTS, a 3G cellular standard). As the trial date approached, Judge Posner excluded all of the parties’ respective expert testimony on damages. Since neither party could prove an entitlement to damages, Judge Posner tentatively canceled the jury trial, finding that it would make little sense to hold a jury trial on infringement liability if a party could not receive relief. However, he allowed the parties to submit further briefing, including relating to the potential for equitable remedies such as injunctive relief. Because Motorola asserted an SEP that was encumbered by a FRAND licensing commitment, Judge Posner specifically requested that Motorola address the bearing of FRAND on the injunction analysis.20 In his opinion, Judge Posner found that neither Motorola nor Apple was entitled to damages or an injunction, and dismissed the case with prejudice. In addressing Motorola’s damages claims, he set forth a clear opinion of what he considers to be the proper way to determine a reasonable royalty for SEPs: “The proper method of computing a FRAND royalty starts with what the cost to the licensee would have been of obtaining, just before the patented invention was declared essential to compliance with the industry standard, a license for the function performed by the patent. That cost would be a measure of the value of the patent qua patent. But once a patent becomes essential to a standard, the patentee’s bargaining power surges because a prospective licensee has no alternative to licensing the patent; he is at the patentee’s mercy. The purpose of the FRAND requirements, the validity of which Motorola doesn’t question, is to confine the patentee’s royalty demand to the value conferred by the patent itself 19. “Microsoft gets upper hand in first Google patent trial.” See http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/04/26/us-microsoftgoogle-trial-idUSBRE93P0BA20130426. 20. See http://essentialpatentblog.com/wp-content/ uploads/2012/12/12.06.22-D.E.-1038-Order-and-Opinion-ofJune-22-2012.pdf. December 2013 242 Mobile and Consumer Electronics 243 as distinct from the additional value—the hold-up value—conferred by the patent’s being designated as standard-essential.” Judge Posner ruled that Motorola could not obtain damages for any infringement of its asserted standardessential patent because Motorola did not provide evidence for calculating a royalty consistent with the above framework. Additionally, with regard to injunctive relief, Judge Posner similarly found that Motorola’s FRAND commitment precluded such relief: “I don’t see how, given FRAND, I would be justified in enjoining Apple from infringing the ‘898 unless Apple refuses to pay a royalty that meets the FRAND requirement. By committing to license its patents on FRAND terms, Motorola committed to license the ‘898 to anyone willing to pay a FRAND royalty and thus implicitly acknowledged that a royalty is adequate compensation for a license to use that patent. How could it do otherwise? How could it be permitted to enjoin Apple from using an invention that it contends Apple must use if it wants to make a cell phone with UMTS telecommunications capability—without which it would not be a cell phone?” Apple and Motorola have appealed Judge Posner’s dismissal of their respective cases to the Federal Circuit (Docket Nos. 2012-1548, -1549). As this case and similar cases go through the appeals process, more to using SEPS to obtain an injunctive relief, as well as finding a methodology for calculation of a reasonable royalty. In re Innovatio IP Ventures, LLC21 Plaintiff and patent-owner Innovatio IP Ventures, LLC (“Innovatio”) had sued a number of entities including coffee shops, restaurants, hotels, supermarkets, large retailers, transportation companies, and other commercial users of wireless internet technology located throughout the United States. Innovatio alleged that the users provide wireless internet access to their customers or use it to manage internal processes, and by doing so infringe various claims of twenty-three patents owned by Innovatio. Judge James F. Holderman in Chicago (Northern District of Illinois) largely adopted Judge Robart’s approach, and in at least one respect—the royalty base—he actually took a licensee-friendlier approach, focusing completely on the price of WiFi chipsets because the patent holder failed to convince him of a royalty based on the price of an entire end product.22 Numerically, Innovatio IP Ventures, LLC, a patent assertion entity that has sued numerous defendants throughout the United States, is deemed entitled to a per-unit royalty of “9.56 cents for each Wi-Fi chip used or sold by the Manufacturers in the United States, subject to the terms of the patents, the applicable statute of limitations, and a finding of infringement for a license to its portfolio of 19 patents essential to the IEEE 802.11 (WiFi) standard. This is a victory for the manufacturers whose products are actually at issue in this case, such as, Cisco Systems, Motorola Solutions, SonicWALL, Netgear, and Hewlett-Packard. According to the order, “Innovatio’s proposed method, for example, would have resulted in royalties on average of approximately $3.39 per access point, $4.72 per laptop, up to $16.17 per tablet, and up to $36.90 per inventory tracking device (such as a bar code scanners).” Based on the non-weighted average of those four examples of $15.30, this means Innovatio got 1 percent less of what it wanted. Toward the end, Judge Holderman’s ruling explains why the 9.56 cents per unit Innovatio is (subject to the conditions quoted further above) entitled to “is approximately three times Judge Robart’s [F]RAND rate of 3.471 cents per unit.” There’s a reason for this difference. Judge Robart concluded that Motorola’s patents were only of minimal value to the standard, [...] whereas the court here has found that Innovatio’s patents are of moderate to moderate-high importance to the standard. A multiplier of about three is a reasonable difference between the two royalties to account for the greater importance of lnnovatio’s patents to the 802.11 standard.” There’s a clear and strong trend in U.S. courts toward rationality in connection with SEP royalty rates. Conversely, irrational demands fail consistently these days. Impact of these decisions—With standardization of increasingly complex technology becoming more widespread in mobile and consumer electronics, decisions regarding current and potential standardessential patents will be increasingly important to a company’s intellectual property strategy. Judge Robart’s decision sets forth the first ever framework to setting a FRAND royalty. Only time will tell if other courts approve of and adopt Judge Robart’s framework. For patents already declared standard es- 21. See http://www.scribd.com/doc/173132403/13-10-03-Innovatio-v-Mult-Def-WiFi-Patents-FRAND-Determination. 22. See http://www.fosspatents.com/2013/10/federal-judgedetermines-19-wifi.html. les Nouvelles Mobile and Consumer Electronics sential, the patent holder and potential licensees can refer to Judge Robart’s analysis when making initial license offers and negotiating FRAND licenses. Finally, companies holding patents that could potentially be declared standard essential can look to the court’s decision to guide their decision-making process when determining whether to declare them essential and subjecting them to a FRAND obligation. V. U.S. President Vetoes ITC Decision On August 3, 2013, the White House invoked a ‘veto’ perogative and overturned a decision by the International Trade Commission that would have barred Apple Inc. from importing some older iPhone and iPad models.23 In his letter, the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) told the ITC Chairman that he had substantial concerns about owners of standard-essential patents, such as Samsung Electronics, in this case, using the ITC to engage in ‘hold up’ obtaining a higher price for use of a patent because of the inclusion of its related technology in the standard. The last time that this reversal option was invoked under Section 19 U.S.C. §1337(j),24 was under President Ronald Reagan. The Patent, Trademark and Copyright Journal (PTCJ) correctly notes that the president’s reversal in cases similar to this could be a serious blow to SEP holders’ access to injunctions, after two highly publicized court cases have concluded that monetary damages are the more appropriate—and perhaps now the sole remedy. The letter did not go so far as to suggest that the ITC should not hear such cases or that it should be faulted for hearing this case. Instead, the letter provides examples of circumstances where an ITC exclusion order might be appropriate, and called on the ITC to investigate ‘relevant factors’ early in its review in future cases. One such factor is ‘hold-out,’ the prospective licensee’s refusal to negotiate a reasonable royalty with the SEP holder. The letter from U.S. Trade Representative disagreed with the position taken by the ITC and cited the relevance of the public interest factors to SEP and FRAND analysis, without either endorsing or criticizing the rest of the commission’s judgments. The letter relied extensively on the January 8 joint policy statement issued by the Department of Justice’s Anti-trust Division and the U.S. Patent and Trademark 23. See http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324 136204578646192008412934.html. 24. See http://www.justice.gov/civil/docs_for ms/CIP_19usc1337.pdf. Office. According to USTR, this “Policy Statement on Remedies for Standards-Essential Patents Subject to Voluntar y FR AND Commitments”: expresses substantial concerns which I strongly share, about the potential harms that can result from owners of [SEPs] who have made a voluntary commitment to offer license SEP’s on [FRAND] terms…, gaining undue leverage and engaging in patent ‘hold-up,’ i.e., asserting the patent to exclude an implementer of the standard from a market to obtain a higher price for use of the patent than would have been possible before the standard was set, when alternative strategies could have been chose. At the same time, technology implementers also can cause potential harm by, for example, engaging in ‘reverse hold-up’ (‘hold-out’), e.g., by constructive refusal to negotiate a FRAND license with the SEP owner or refusal to pay what has been determined to be a FRAND royalty. Nevertheless, the Trade Representative went on to state that an exclusion order may still be an appropriate remedy as well when a putative licensee is not subject to the jurisdiction of a court that could award damages. He urged that the commission in the future develop a factual record from the onset of each proceeding involving SEP on “the presence or absence of patent hold-up or reverse hold-up.” VI. Mobile Patent Wars Have Gone Global Over the past decade, patent infringement suits and countersuits are no longer being initiated solely in U.S. district courts or the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC). Instead, they are also simultaneously being brought in forums across Europe and Asia. This is typified by the so-called “smartphone patent wars,” including, most recently, Apple’s ongoing worldwide battle with Samsung over the parties’ competing smartphones and tablets.25 Filing patent infringement suits against an alleged infringer in more than one jurisdiction provides the patentee with major strategic advantages. However, a successful global patent litigation campaign requires the careful selection of intellectual property (IP) to use, as well as complex strategic planning that takes into account the differences between key jurisdictions in timing, procedure and substantive patent law. Foreign patent infringement awards tend to be much smaller than that available in the U.S. Enhanced damages are not common outside of the U.S. and are not available in some key jurisdictions, 25. See http://www.economist.com/blogs/babbage/2011/12/ intellectual-property-and-mobile-devices. December 2013 244 Mobile and Consumer Electronics such as Germany and Japan. Injunctive relief that can ban imports or sales in a given country is also available as a remedy across jurisdictions. Moreover, although this practice is controversial and may be curtailed in the future, the Dutch courts have historically issued cross-border injunctions in IP cases. This greatly broadens the potential impact of an infringement decision in the Netherlands. European customs proceedings can also be used as a powerful and cost-efficient tool for patentees to block infringing goods from the European Union. In 1999, the European regulations were broadened to include patents as a class of IP that the patentee can use to block importation of infringing products.26 However, the utility of customs proceedings is limited, because the detained goods’ owner can obtain their release by paying a security sufficient to protect the patent owner’s interests. ■ 26. See http://www.arelaw.com/downloads/ARElaw_PatLit_ Mapping_PracticeNote.pdf. 245 les Nouvelles Samsung And LG Electronics Samsung And LG: From Also-Rans To Dominance In Consumer Electronics By Robert A. Myers Abstract Today, Samsung is the world leader in flat screen TV and smartphone sales. LG is second in TV sales, fifth in cell phones. Samsung fabricated its first LCD screen in 1995, well after such screens already dominated laptop computers, and had shipped its first cell phone only in 1988. LG wasn’t even founded until 1958 when it started its development of the first Korean-made radios. By 1982 it shipped its first color TV—made in the USA. In this time frame, not even twenty years ago, TV shipments were dominated by Japanese consumer manufacturers and cell phones were led by Motorola and Nokia. This paper explores possible sources of the secret to the Koreans’ success and finds that the usual metrics—in particular patents, R&D investment, and low cost labor—don’t explain it. We speculate that “industrial policy” measures of the South Korean government may have been decisive. Historical Context I n 1945, World War II ended. Japan was devastated, with most of its cities in ruins and its economy literally a “basket case.” Korea was almost as bad, as a former Japanese colony, and about to get worse with the North Korean invasion, followed by the UN “Police Action” and the subsequent Chinese invasion. Ironically, the Korean War was a catalyst for Japan’s recovery, as Japan became the pillar of the American war effort. As Japan revived, South Korea was ravaged by war. By the middle fifties, Korea was in no better shape than Japan had been ten years earlier, except it was further troubled by a series of autocratic dictatorships. Japan further benefitted from being viewed by the U.S. as an anticommunist bastion, on which aid and other benefits were lavished.1 Korea, in contrast, was a footnote in the cold war, mostly characterized by the continued armed confrontation at the 38th parallel. It was a virtual stepchild of American foreign and economic policy. 1. See, for example, http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/events/ kowar/log-sup/log-sup.htm and http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/ events/kowar/log-sup/japan.htm. The advances discussed below are all in the context of recovery from the destruction of these wars. The Korean War, did not “end” until 1953, while Japan had surrendered only eight years earlier. With that head start and the U.S. investment during the Korean War the Japanese electronics industry was able to charge into the post-war 20th cen■ Robert A. Myers, tury with few obstacles. Fairfield Resources Not only did Korea start International and Columbia later, but the Korean U. Business School, economy was smaller Senior Vice President and less advanced than the Japanese—of which and Adjunct Professor, it had, of course, been New York, NY a part until 1945. The E-mail: [email protected] European and U.S. electronics makers, being the winners, were not driven by the same necessity to overcome adversity. Evolution of the TV Industry In 2013 sales of TV sets—now, virtually all liquid cr ystal technology—are dominated by Samsung and LG, Korean companies who until this century were bit players in the world of consumer electronics. Twenty-five years ago one would have been forgiven if they had not noticed these now electronics giants. In those years the leading TV makers—then, of course, using cathode ray tube (CRT) technology—were in Japan, a magnet for “out-sourced manufacturing” thanks to their skill at high volume low cost techniques. Sony, with what we would now recognize as an Apple-like reputation for quality (and prices), Sanyo, Panasonic, Toshiba and Hitachi, conglomerates selling everything from nuclear reactors to washing machines, and Sharp, which was about to bet the farm and its whole business on liquid crystal TV sets. Loitering in the wings were the surviving European makers, Philips, Telefunken, Siemens and others, barely more than brands even then. Perhaps the most striking change was the recent announcement that Samsung will “invest” in Sharp, one of its key suppliers—essentially a bailout. And Sharp is not December 2013 246 Samsung And LG Electronics alone, with some industry experts suggesting that Japan just say “sayonara to TV manufacturing.”2 And the U.S.? Already a hollow giant, with many famous brands like RCA attached to foreign-made boxes thanks to the lower costs promised in the Far East, where “the foothills of the Himalayas” were already a major source of anything with significant labor content. The Americans had evidently gambled that they could survive with their knowledge-based engineering talent, oblivious to the near certainty that there were plenty of smart engineers in China (as there had been in Japan decades earlier) who would, sooner or later, take over the higher valueadded parts of the value chain and leave the U.S. to sell and service the machines that the ships from China were busy unloading. Was this transition inevitable? How, in fact, did it happen? Here are some thoughts, starting with LCD flat panel TV sets. Evolution of TV Technology Television itself is, conceptually, at least, 100 years old, with the first U.S. commercial broadcasts (for minimal audiences, of course) transmitted shortly before World War II. However, “The first commercially made electronic television sets with cathode ray tubes were manufactured by Telefunken in Germany in 1934, followed by other makers in France (1936), Britain (1936), and America (1938). The cheapest of the pre-World War II factory-made American sets, a 1938 image-only model with a 3-inch (8 cm) screen, cost $125, the equivalent of $1,863 in 2007. The cheapest model with a 12-inch (30 cm) screen was $445 ($6,633).”3 The war interrupted the growth of commercial TV, but the technology itself was rapidly accelerated by the military need for reliable electronics and (as in radar and sonar) high quality displays. The basics of a CRT TV set are relatively simple for an engineer to master (“not rocket science”) and apart from incremental enhancements a TV set was little more than a commodity, distinguished from its competitors by cost, quality, industrial design, and brand recognition. Although the military need for advanced technology did not diminish after 1945—indeed, the Cold War provided a continuing source of development 2. http://www.eetimes.com/electronics-news/4373507/WillJapan--Inc--say-Sayonara-to-TV-manufacture. 3. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Histor y_of_ television#Television_sets. 247 les Nouvelles money—TV technology was energized in the 1960s. After RCA had made the then-daring gamble to introduce color TV, teletype-based computer terminals were rapidly replaced by CRT terminals. This was an application which the U.S. TV makers appear to have completely missed. IBM, the industry leader, developed and manufactured its own displays (eventually moving both development and manufacturing to Japan by the 1980s). This was partly because in those years IBM did everything in-house and partly because TV technology was not mature enough to deliver the needed quality for a computer display, in spite of their superficial similarities. The move to manufacturing in Japan was, again, motivated by the allure of high-volume, low-cost manufacturing. However, the computer display business had an important side effect. Not being dominated by the traditional consumer electronics brands, any company could dive in and develop a line of “plug-compatible” monitors. Limited by their fragmented computer industry, no Japanese computer company had the volume, much less the vision, to dominate the field. What they did have was cadres of engineers who spent a great deal of energy researching alternatives to CRT-based TV sets. Although liquid crystal displays were slowly emerging, if only in displays more suited to watches and calculators, what initially appeared to be the major technology candidate to replace the CRT was the AC plasma display, originally invented at the University of Illinois in 1964 and seriously commercialized in the early 1970s by IBM in a banking terminal display.4 The plasma display technology had a good run, greatly extended when engineers were able to produce a full color display by adding phosphors to the panel’s cells. Not an easy technology to master, the major protagonist was Panasonic (Matsushita) which appears to be ready to throw in the towel and leave the field in 2014.5 Most of the other Japanese TV makers avoided major investments into this new technology, although Samsung and LG did invest, and look like they will be the only survivors for a few more years.6 Other alternatives did not fare nearly as well, although clever engineers regularly showcased the newest technology at the annual “Display Week” show 4. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plasma_display. 5. See, for example http://www.avsforum.com/t/1463886/ panasonic-may-end-plasma-production-in-2014 and http://mashable.com/2012/05/11/panasonic-plasma-tv/. 6. Information Display, Mar/Apr 2013, page 3. Samsung And LG Electronics of the Society for Information Display. Faced with the barrier of a potentially huge investment if they were to compete with the LCDs, however, each of these hot technologies soon faded, like a roman candle. What has become the ubiquitous TV display technology—indeed, virtually the only viable contemporary TV display technology—is the digital liquid crystal display.7 LC-based displays first emerged—slowly—in the 1960s when RCA (!), which led the way, demonstrated mini LC displays, using new materials from the German Merck.8 The first RCA patent [3,322,485] was filed in 1962 and issued in 1967. By the early 1980s, virtually every Japanese consumer electronics maker had a group dabbling in the technology. One can speculate that LG did, too—Samsung hadn’t even filed a patent and only released its first (B&W) TV set in 1980. Even IBM kept its hand in. By 1985, prototypes with a diagonal measurement of the order of 10 inches—not competitive for a TV, but perfect for a portable (laptop) computer—were being shown at the SID meetings. By the early 1990s, the IBMToshiba partnership, Display Technologies, Inc., was one of the top three makers of liquid crystal displays. Even as late as 1993, the first issue of Information Display, the Journal of the Society for Information Display (SID), had several articles on advances in CRT technology, along with articles on various LCD competitors such as ferroelectrics in addition to several papers on LCD technology.9 The field was open even then, although the articles reporting advances in LC technology strongly indicated where the industry was headed. The technology involved was intrinsically far more complex than CRTs. The devices were in fact far more like giant integrated circuits than TV sets and the manufacturing skills involved were a challenge to everyone—but well suited to companies that had been making ICs. Making displays at a competitive cost involved processing a large plate of glass (actually anticipated by the glass used at the start of a plasma display line) with the transistors that drive the pixels of the display deposited by expensive tools in a production line that would soon cost billions of dollars. Today’s LCD manufacturing lines process 7. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liquid_crystal_display. 8. [See, for example, “History Crystallized: A First-Person Account of the Development of Matrix-Addressed LCDs for Television at RCA in the 1960s” http://www.informationdisplay. org/article.cfm?year=2008&issue=01&file=art7.]. 9 . h t t p : / / o n l i n e l i b r a r y. w i l e y. c o m / d o i / 1 0 . 1 0 0 2 / jsid.1993.1.issue-1/issuetoc. plates of glass the size of a garage door. Few people can afford one of these giant panels, but the key to a competitive cost structure is processing the largest possible sheet of glass, from which smaller panels can be cut. This was long seen as the key to reducing semiconductor cost, in that the larger a wafer being processed, the more chips could be produced in a single process. Recognition of this truism, however, was not enough—management had to take the risk of making multibillion dollar investments. Samsung and LG did. As challenging as the LCD technology was, it had one virtue in comparison with CRT-based TVs. No one had a head start on building the factory or the displays. The Japanese, of course, had extensive experience in IC manufacturing, greatly facilitated by the government’s catch-up industry policy stimulus,10 and all the Japanese computer makers had IC manufacturing capability with large and growing patent portfolios. Sooner or later, they all developed in-house LCD capability, with Sharp making the most aggressive strategic choice in the early 1990s. Samsung was also well positioned to make LCD’s, as it was already the world’s leading maker of DRAMs. Samsung and LG Although founded in 1938, it was not until the late 1960s that the Samsung Group entered into the electronics industry when it formed several electronics-related divisions. Its first TV product was a black-and-white television set. In 1980 Samsung entered the telecommunications hardware industry with telephone switchboards and Samsung Electronics began to invest heavily in research and development, investments that were evidently key in pushing the company to leadership of the global electronics industry. Samsung became the largest producer of memory chips in the world in 1992, and is the world’s second-largest chipmaker after Intel.11 Not until 1995 did it create its first liquid-crystal display screen. The field was already dominated by patented technologies, almost none of which were Samsung’s. Ten years later, Samsung had grown to be the world’s largest manufacturer of liquid-crystal display panels. Indeed, its current share exceeds that of the three leading Japanese brands combined. Samsung had earlier made a strategic decision to go into the DRAM business—even then almost a 10. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Industrial_policy_of_Japan. 11. Worldwide Top 20 Semiconductor Market Share Ranking Year by Year, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Worldwide_Top_20_ Semiconductor_Market_Share_Ranking_Year_by_Year. December 2013 248 Samsung And LG Electronics commodity12—and by 1992 Samsung was already the world leader in the manufacture of memory chips.13 This success in the face of even stronger adverse patent positions no doubt encouraged Samsung to challenge other technologies where it would have to make substantial payments for needed patent licenses. Staked by a government eager to catch up with and surpass the Japanese, capital was not a problem14 and the Korean home market was protected as the Japanese market had been earlier. Even patents were brushed off. When sued for infringement, Samsung just paid—but, meanwhile, making huge R&D investments so that the next time around they would have enough patents of their own to reduce or eliminate royalty payments. Samsung had followed the DRAM path when it moved into making hard disk drives, again paying for the many needed patent licenses until its internal R&D gave it patent parity. By 2010 it had achieved a 10 percent global market share but, reflecting a focus on the bottom line, sold the disk business to Seagate for $1.4B in 2011.15 The model clearly worked, and it is not hard to see the logic in adopting it to move into LCDs—particularly since the LCD technology in the late 1990s was still emerging, and leadership was still in contention. The government’s deep pockets no doubt made building factories easy—and they didn’t have to worry about public investors complaining about return on investment, at least in the U.S., since Samsung is still not listed on a U.S. exchange. In contrast, IBM and Toshiba abandoned their ambitions to become major LCD makers circa 1993 when the price tag for the next generation fab16 approached $2B.17 Samsung gained the #1 position worldwide in 2007. By 2012 Samsung led worldwide sales with a dominant 26 percent share; LG was second with a 14.6 percent share and Sony third with a 9.5 percent share. Surprisingly, the sales of “U.S.—based” Vizio18 12. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung. 13. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Worldwide_Top_20_Semiconductor_Market_Share_Ranking_Year_by_Year. 14. Samsung continues to invest at an industry-leading rate, “will invest $18 billion in its memory-chip and display businesses this year,” http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-07-25/samsungmisses-estimates-as-high-end-smartphones-near-saturation.html. 15. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung_Electronics. 16. Industry term for manufacturing facility. 17. They (separately) sold their know-how to different Taiwanese display makers. 18. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vizio. 249 les Nouvelles virtually equaled Samsung in the U.S. However, Vizio is hardly a U.S. manufacturer, other than its headquarters and a South Dakota call center: “Vizio’s major partner in the consumer electronics arena is AmTran Technology, a Taiwan-based OEM/ODM that manufactures more than half of the televisions sold by Vizio and owns a 23 percent stake in the company. Vizio also manufactures its products in Mexico and China under agreements with ODM assemblers in those countries.” LG was originally established in 1958 as GoldStar, producing radios, TVs, refrigerators, washing machines, and air conditioners. In 1999 LG acquired 100 percent of the bankrupt U.S. Zenith, having purchased a 50 percent interest in 1995. Zenith at the time had over 900 issued U.S. patents. Although the patents strongly emphasized about-to-be-obsoleted analog and CRT-based,19, 20 television and related technologies, it also included valuable patents on vestigial sideband modulation which were essential to emerging digital TV standards. Royalties of $5 per TV set resulted in total payments of $25M in 2006 and $50M in 2007 and still are continuing.21 What the Zenith purchase also provided, in addition to a competent engineering team (even now generating patents for LG), was a brand that still appealed to a U.S. consumer. I believe that LG saw that Samsung’s “invest, pay royalties, develop internal technology, invest some more” would work and—possibly also backed by the government22 or, at least, the chaebols23—saw an opening and moved aggressively. Unlike Samsung, LG Display has been listed on the NYSE since 2004, but well after it had started investing in LCD fabs. Already by 1998, four years after LG’s first CD-ROM drive, LG had achieved worldwide #1 ranking in sales of CD-ROMs—yet another technology dominated by third party patents—and is now the world’s second- 19. “Zenith was acquired by LG… mostly for its DTV patents.” http://displaydaily.com/2012/01/30/last-one-out-please-turn-offthe-lights/. 20. Even their handful of “flat panel” applications covered CRT flat panel displays which still had some attractions to engineers who had been brought up on CRTs. 21. LG Electronics 50-Year History, Vol. 04, English Edition (1958), p. 48. 22. The Korean government announced the electronic industry development plan in 1966 and, in 1969, the ‘Electronic industry 8-year development project.’ LG Electronics 50-year History, Vol. 04, 2008, English Edition. 23. Large Korean family-controlled corporate groups. In Japan, zaibatsu. Samsung And LG Electronics largest television manufacturer (after Samsung),[1] and the world’s fifth-largest mobile phone maker by unit sales since the second quarter of 2012. In comparison with Japanese makers, the Koreans had the advantage of lower labor costs (even if they initially had to buy their manufacturing tools from Japan), lower cost of capital, and little need to conform to Wall Street investment measurements. In retrospect, it is not hard to see the logic of their approach even if they now are close to the bind originally faced by the CRT TV makers. There is industry over-capacity, profit margins are fading, and—as the LCD technology becomes commoditized—lower cost Chinese (and other Asian) newcomers are undercutting the leaders on cost and price. As we see from the technology literature, the reaction is to search for new technologies, like organic light emitting devices (OLEDs), quantum dots, LED backlights, three-D, ultra-resolution… Only time will tell if any of these initiatives can maintain the industry, or whether some still incipient replacement will come to dominate. It should not be surprising to note that Samsung and LG have followed the same path into leadership in sales of cell phones and smartphones, so that Samsung—using phones powered by Google’s Android—has become such a force that, in spite of a billion dollar jury damage award to Apple,24 they are now the 500-pound gorilla in the smartphone arena, ranking number one in cell phone and smartphone sales since 2012. Samsung’s mobile initiative started rather late, in 1983, and its first successful handset didn’t ship until 1988. As in LCDs, they surged to a leadership position in spite of having a thin portfolio of relevant wireless patents, almost none of which were “standards essential.” LG has been less successful, but still achieved fifth ranking in worldwide handset unit sales.25 Now, thanks to their broad and deep patent portfolios, they are in a strong defensive position, even when they choose to enter a new field, as few manufacturers would want to risk infringing a large number of Samsung’s or LG’s many thousands of patents. Patents and Success The development of the Samsung and LG portfolios of U.S. patents parallels their technology development. LG first filed its two issued U.S. patents in 1984. Six more issued from applications filed in 1985 and 27 issued from applications filed in 1986. In 1987 24. http://www.foxnews.com/tech/2012/08/24/jury-reachesverdict-in-apple-vs-samsung-case/. 25. http://www.gartner.com/newsroom/id/2335616. LG filed for 95 later-issued U.S. patents while Samsung, just getting started, had two patents issued from 1987 files, 26 filed in 1988 and 189 filed in 1989 (passing LG’s 99). By 1990 both had high triple-digit filings that later issued. In short, until 1988-1989, neither LG nor Samsung was a significant patentee in the U.S. (or anywhere else, except possibly in Korea). Patents and R&D investment are two popular proxy measurements for business success. However, they are hardly decisive. Patents and success are certainly correlated, but causality is not obvious. Microsoft was already a raging success before it earned its first twenty U.S. patents, in 1995; its first (three!) U.S. patent applications were only filed at the end of 1992. And Apple, that paragon of innovation, had received only a total of 61 U.S. patents by 1990, when it had already achieved iconic “innovativeness” status. In contrast, IBM and AT&T had made patenting a key element in their development strategy, and they fed the patent process with leading R&D investments for decades. More recently, IBM has continued to lead in the number of U.S. patents awarded for the last twenty years along with its continuing major R&D investments. Samsung, from a standing start has leapt to the forefront of patent recipients, ironically joining Canon, Sony, Matsushita, Toshiba and other Japanese brands in the top ten. Clearly, there is more to success than accumulating certificates from the U.S. patent office. To borrow a metaphor from criminal law, a good patent attorney can get a patent on a ham sandwich. Apple offers yet another example of the limited value of using a patent portfolio as a predictor of success. In spite of its huge infringement win over Samsung, the Apple portfolio until very recently has been unimpressive, numbering less than 100 patents per year (in comparison with Samsung’s and LG’s— and Canon’s, Sony’s and Toshiba’s—thousands). In addition to the royalties it may (but doesn’t automatically) generate,26 a strong patent portfolio serves to insulate the company’s products from infringement suits by providing the currency for cross licenses. However, as we have seen in the above discussion, a company determined to compete can buy its way in if it has enough ready money to pay for licenses and to invest in the R&D needed to generate its own patents. See the Appendix for a table comparing the leading recipients of U.S. patents over the last 20 years. Nevertheless, it only takes one really good patent to make a company, or a university, or an individual inventor rich. For example, one patent—US3,789,832, 26. IBM’s income from its patent portfolio has been as high as $1.5B, and still exceeds $1B. December 2013 250 Samsung And LG Electronics Apparatus and method for detecting cancer in tissue, issued 2-5-1974, filed 3-17-1972, by Raymond Damadian—underlies the entire MRI imaging industry. Other Possible Success Factors R&D investment, while a somewhat better indicator of future success, often fails, as well. Consider the dot-com billionaires whose R&D was carried out in a dorm room. This is consistent with the intuitive feeling, confirmed by data, that patents and R&D are closely correlated, while the number of patents and industrial success are less so.27 Another argument often advanced relates to the availability of low cost labor. Indeed, that was an early rationale for IBM building its presence in Japan in the 1970s and 80s (obviously before the great Japanese bubble). It is still an obvious factor in the dominance of Chinese contract manufacturers such as Foxconn, as well as the U.S.–based Flextronics which does most of its contract assembly in China. Nevertheless, the fields in which Samsung and LG have carved out leadership—DRAMs, hard disks, smartphones and LCDs—are capital intensive industries, with much of the production performed in automated factories, now costing billions of dollars each. These are products where the cost of capital is far more significant than the cost of labor. As noted earlier, even in the mid-nineties the cost of a competitive TFT-LCD manufacturing facility was approaching several billion USD. Five years ago it was already $3B28 and is now more than twice that as the size of the glass processed has grown. As J.P. Morgan is said to have replied when questioned about the cost of a yacht, “If you have to ask the price, you can’t afford it.”29 Since the Korean government controlled access to capital,30 much as Japan had done earlier, it is likely that the government copied the successful Japanese industrial policy by enabling access to low cost capital for Samsung and LG, providing them with a significant competitive advantage. Moreover, 27. “Applied Econometrics and International Development.” AEID. Vol. 5/4 (2005), Prodan, Igor. Influence Of Research And Development Expenditures On Number Of Patent Applications: Selected Case Studies In Oecd Countries And Central Europe, 1981-2001. 28. Craig Addison, SEMI Dazzling Display Issues: LCD Market Growth, Glass Size, Fab Cost, and OLEDs, at http://www.semi. org/en/P044084. 29. Business Education World, Vol. 42. Gregg Publishing Company,1961, p. 32. 30. See, for example, Kang-Kook Lee (Ritsumeikan University), Economic Growth Controlling Capital: focusing on the 1960s’ experience in Korea, www.ritsumei.ac.jp/~leekk/study/ lee-ko60cc-ss.doc. 251 les Nouvelles these were not public companies while they were aggressively building up their manufacturing capacity, so they were not troubled by Wall Street’s fixation on return on capital. They could afford to focus on the numerator, and ignore the denominator. So, although we must look elsewhere than to labor cost for factors that have led to the success of Samsung and, in a lesser way, LG, the cost and availability of capital are an important factor in their success in comparison with their fading Japanese competitors. And, as a colleague of mine reminded me, we have to look fast before other unknowns rise up and knock today’s leaders off their pedestals. What Happened to the Japanese Makers? The Japanese consumer electronics giants do not appear to have made egregious errors. After the Plaza Accords bubble burst in the 1990s, they were victims of a high yen and a deflationary economy, limiting their ability to invest and export. In a narrow sense, they also paid a penalty for being too early with innovation: Japan’s national broadcasting company NHK led the world with satellite and high definition TV broadcasts into the 1990s. It’s possible that this nascent leadership opportunity led the Japanese makers astray by their need to concentrate on analog technology in order to satisfy their domestic market, thus missing the tide favoring digital TV, so astutely exploited by LG in its purchase of Zenith. Another misstep was costly investments in plasma TV, notably by Panasonic (Matsushita), but that didn’t seem to have troubled Samsung and LG. The TV makers continued to invest in R&D and pile up patents and even to invest in bigger and bigger fabs until fairly recently. And, as noted above, they may not have had access to the low cost capital available in Korea, greatly limiting their ability to invest profitably in building new LCD fabs. Finally, no one would argue that Korean engineers were smarter than Japanese engineers but it seems likely that they worked harder and longer in a nationalistic drive to outdo their former colonial masters. One last possible source of the Japanese loss of leadership would be in the executive suites, where Korean management appears to have been much less risk averse. An exploration of this possibility is beyond the scope of this brief analysis. The Verdict Samsung and LG appear to have been the beneficiaries of shrewd industrial policies of the South Korean government and superior senior management choices coupled with the determination of their staff, somewhat enhanced by misjudgments by Japanese TV consumer electronics makers’ top management. ■ Samsung And LG Electronics Appendix 1 – Some Leading Recipients of U.S. Patents31 IBM32 Samsung LG33 Matsushita Canon 2012 6478 5081 3101 2011 6148 4968 2873 2533 Sony Toshiba 3174 3032 2447 2818 2265 2451 Hitachi 1455 Panasonic Apple Microsoft 2769 1303 2613 825 2309 Intel 2010 5866 4518 2763 2443 2551 2130 2212 741 3086 1652 2009 4887 3592 2014 1759 2200 1656 1669 416 2901 1534 2008 4169 3502 1720 1469 2107 1461 1575 272 2026 1772 2007 3125 2723 1456 1910 1983 1455 1519 166 1637 1864 2006 3621 2451 1364 2229 2366 1771 2005 2941 1641 975 1688 1828 2004 3248 1604 1012 1934 1805 1305 1514 133 1601 2003 3415 1313 779 1786 1992 1311 1893 108 1592 2002 3288 1328 655 1544 1893 1434 1601 101 2001 3411 1450 496 1440 2000 2886 1441 579 1672 1732 141 1959 1258 1271 104 1549 1310 1877 1363 1890 1385 1232 1271 117 136 1999 2756 1545 650 1795 1410 1200 1998 2657 1304 576 1928 1316 1170 1094 268 189 1997 1724 1381 859 862 903 236 731 411 1996 591 323 1995 504 298 1994 486 252 33 Zenith 78 1993 435 175 All but 129 Zenith 78 1992 305 156 All but 95 Zenith 56 1991 205 135 All but 77 Zenith 42 1990 82 126 All but 67 Zenith 38 1989 47 96 All but 36 Zenith 12 1988 15 119 All but 39 Zenith 13 1987 11 111 All but 18 Zenith 12 1986 9 70 Zenith 10 1985 3 59 Zenith 6 277 Zenith 19801984 188 138 31. Note that not all primary sources agree! http://en.wikipedia. org/wiki/List_of_top_United_States_patent_recipients. 32. For 2012 data, see http://www.lotempiolaw.com/2013/02/ articles/patents/top-10-companies-issued-us-patents-in-2012. 33. www.delphion.com tabulated by the author. December 2013 252 The Strategy Of Filing Early Licensing-In From The First-To-File: The Strategy Of Filing Early Concepts As Incomplete Patent Applications By James Anglehart This is an executive summary of this important topic, and is not a complete review. Business decisions should not be made based only on information given here, but in consultation with your Intellectual Property (IP) professional. In reading this summary, you should understand the framework of patent application priority and the first-inventor-to-file system, as well as the importance of including such issues in managing your business. Patent Application Priority I n 1883, the Paris Convention1 was established to allow a patent applicant to gain access to patent rights outside the home country with the same rights as the home country. The Convention established that a patent applicant would have twelve months to file the corresponding patent applications in other countries, while keeping the benefit of the filing date of the first-filed home application. This was an important milestone since the filing date is a critical element to the validity of a patent application. Today, most countries require that a patent application for an invention be filed before the invention is disclosed publicly, and such countries are known as “absolute novelty” countries. The Paris Convention and the rules for awarding a priority date have evolved considerably since 1883. Today the Paris Convention forms part of the WTO’s Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs)2 with all WTO member countries as subscribers. The effective filing date is not given to a patent application as a whole, but is given on a patent claim by claim basis. Furthermore, a patent application can claim priority dates from two or more earlier patent applications. The priority rights of a patent application is limited to the subject matter disclosed in a valid 1. http://www.wipo.int/treaties/en/ip/paris/trtdocs_wo020.html. 2. http://www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/trips_e/t_agm0_e.htm, Article 2. 253 les Nouvelles priority document. Any new matter not part of the priority document is not entitled to the priority date. This is called partial priority.3 Different Standards The PCT International Search and Preliminary Examination Guidelines4 prepared by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), that administers the Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT), sets out in Section 6.09 the basic test to determine whether a claim is entitled to the date of a priority document. The test is the same as the test of whether an amendment to an application satisfies the requirement of PCT Article 34(2), namely the requirement that no new descriptive subject matter can be introduced by way of an amendment. Section 6.09 goes on to add that, for the priority date to be allowed, the subject matter of the claim must be explicitly or inherently disclosed in the priority document, including any features implicit to a person skilled in the art. Under the PCT guidelines, when it comes to assessing priority based on an earlier-filed patent application, priority is not granted when the earlier-filed patent application contains only a mere mention of an invention with sketchy details.5 The issue of new matter being introduced to an application as a result of claim amendments is handled differently in some countries. In the USA and Canada, for example, the policy is quite generous to patent 3. This follows from Paris Convention Article 4F that permits an application to claim multiple priorities or to claim priority of an earlier patent application while describing further elements not in the earlier application. Priority is thus based on elements of the application, and claims to different elements can have different priorities. 4. www.wipo.int/pct/en/texts/pdf/ispe.pdf. 5. This also follows from Paris Convention Article 4F that introduces the notion that priority relates to the “elements… included in the application whose priority is claimed” as well as Article 4H (see below note) that requires specific disclosure of the elements claimed. The Strategy Of Filing Early applicants. A way of defining or characterizing an invention, that was not expressed in the originally-filed application, but that defines operable embodiments disclosed in the original application will generally be accepted in newly presented or amended claims. For example, when a patent application described an apparatus having elements A+B+C in combination, it will likely be accepted to present a claim to the combination of elements A+C, even if there was no implicit or explicit description of the exclusion of element B, as long as the reader would understand how to make the combination operate in the absence of element B. In the European Patent Office (EPO), a claim amendment would not be permitted to claim a subcombination of a disclosed combination, unless the omitted element was inherently understood from the original description as being optional. In general, the characterization of the invention formulated in a claim must be found in the patent application description or claims as originally filed. Even if there is no requirement for claims in a valid priority patent application,6 its reader should have understood the scope of the invention to be claimed. China’s SIPO is typically even more strict than the EPO on the point of amendments that add new matter or go “beyond the scope” of the original application. New Zealand is a country that exceptionally is more generous than the PCT guidelines cited above in that it is possible to base a priority claim when the priority document describes the same inventive concept, but fails to enable the invention as claimed. Bicycle Brake Example Imagine that the bicycle rim brake was a new invention, and a first patent application describes the side-pull rim brake as shown in Figure 1. This device is described as allowing the pulling action on the cable to bring the rubber pads against the metal rim of the bicycle wheel for braking. The cylinder Figure 1 6. Paris Convention Article 4H reads, “Priority may not be refused on the ground that certain elements of the invention for which priority is claimed do not appear among the claims formulated in the application in the country of origin, provided that the application documents as a whole specifically disclose such elements.” 24 on the cable sheath is described as an adjusting barrel for compensating for cable stretch. There are two questions that follow concerning priority rights based on such a description: (1) can a claim define a sub-combination of what was described and (2) can a claim cover more than the embodiment described in the priority application? Specifically, can a claim omit the adjusting barrel? And, can a claim cover equivalents, such as the center-pull shown in Figure 2. In most countries, including the European Patent Office (EPO) ■ James Anglehart, states and China (SIPO), Anglehart et al, priority is to be given to an earlier-filed patent Owner/Patent Agent, application when there Montreal, Canada is clear support for the E-mail: james.anglehart@ characterization of the anglehart.et-al.ca invention as claimed. If there was no mention in the priority document that the adjusting barrel was optional, likely the patentee will not be allowed to benefit from the filing date of the priority patent application for a claim that omits this feature. Likewise, a generic claim to the cable actuating at least one brake lever, without including the feature that the sheath is mounted to one lever, while the cable end is connected to the other lever, will likely not be accepted in Europe or China. However, in the U.S. or Canada, such a generic claim covering the center-pull equivalent will likely be considered valid when supported by the description of the side-pull brake. In this context, the reader will appreciate the significant gap between U.S. and EPO practices. Special care is required to ensure that patent applications describe variants to be covered and what the essential components of an invention are. Even when not including claims, there must be clear description of the invention essentially the equivalent to well-thought-out claims. To define such features, Figure 2 December 2013 254 The Strategy Of Filing Early typically a patent search is done before filing a priority application. The First-to-File System In this article, a distinction is made between Firstto-File outside the U.S., and First-Inventor-to-File in the U.S. In First-to-File systems throughout the world, when two patent applicants file for the same invention, the patent is awarded to the applicant having the earliest priority date. Because patent applications are published at 18 months from their priority date, the existence of the first-filed patent application is discovered later, typically in examination by the Patent Office. The patent applicant with the later priority date, namely the “second-to-file” applicant, must exclude from her claims whatever could be claimed in the first-filed application. This is what is called “citable for novelty only.”7 When the second-to-file applicant files after the first-filed application is published or the first-to-file applicant otherwise publishes the invention, the published material can be combined with the state of the art to invalidate the second-filed patent application. If the second-filed patent application were to describe the center-pull bicycle brake, while the first-filed application only the side-pull, then the second-to-file applicant might enjoy exclusive rights to his brake because the first-filed application failed to describe it. Furthermore, if the first-filed patent application failed to support a generic claim to the equivalent described in the second-filed patent application, then the second-to-file may be free to commercialize their brake without account to the first-to-file. If the second-to-file applicant successfully defined the generic claim to the bicycle brake while the firstto-file applicant failed to do so, then the second-to-file applicant can claim any such bicycle brake with the explicit exception of the brake as described by the first-filed patent application. This is how things work outside the U.S. 7. The exclusion of earlier-filed patent applications from being cited for obviousness is defined by Article 56 EPC that states, “If the state of the art also includes documents within the meaning of Article 54, paragraph 3 (i.e. earlier-filed patent applications), these documents shall not be considered in deciding whether there has been an inventive step.” In Canada, third party earlierfiled patent applications are novelty-destroying under Section 28.2(c),(d) and the definition of information that may be relied on for considering obviousness under Section 28.3 excludes the prior art of Section 28.2(c),(d). 255 les Nouvelles Thus, preparing a good patent application with support for accurate claims can be just as important as being the first-to-file, as there is very good potential to gain valuable patent rights as long as one files before publication of the first-to-file applicant’s invention. U.S. First-Inventor-to-File The “Leahy-Smith America Invents Act” (AIA) came into effect on March 16, 2013. It changed the U.S. from being a first-to-invent system to a first-to-file system with unique characteristics like none other in the world. The difference in the U.S. system is that the firstfiled application is prior art combinable with the whole state of the art.8 In the above example, the central pulling cable bicycle brake would have to be inventive over the side-pull brake to be patentable. The second-to-file applicant does not have nearly the same opportunity to obtain valuable patent protection for differences between what each applicant described. For example, the cable tension release lever and mechanism shown in association with the cable mount would have to be non-obvious over the side-pull brake patent application description and other prior art references to be patentable. Earlier-filed patent applications were combinable with other prior art in U.S. first-to-invent patent law, however, such earlier-filed patent applications were able to be overcome as a reference if the second-filer could show a date of invention prior to the filing date of the earlier-filed patent application.9 The ability to establish a date of invention for overcoming any reference has been abolished with AIA. The net effect is that U.S. first-to-file rules are punitive to those who are second-to-file in comparison with the first-to-file systems around the world. Leveling the Playing Field in the U.S. With the distinct system in the U.S., a distinct approach is called for. In the rest of the world, it is important to be the first-to-file a patent application that can support future claims, as discussed above. Such patent applications can be called “complete 8. 35USC§102(a) includes earlier-filed patent applications from another inventor as prior art. 35USC§102(c) defines “another inventor” to extend to other applicants. 35USC§103 requires a claimed invention to be nonobvious in view of the prior art as defined in 35USC§102 without exception. 9. Under 35USC§102(e) prior to AIA, an earlier-filed patent application was prior art if it was filed before the inventor made his invention. 37CFR1.131 allowed for an affidavit of prior invention to be submitted to dismiss as prior art a 35USC§102(e) reference. The Strategy Of Filing Early priority applications.” These applications require a full understanding of the invention, its variants, the prior art and of the desired claim scope. Accordingly, a patent applicant cannot be ready to file a complete priority application as soon as the concept for the invention is available. However, because a U.S. patent application is combinable with the state of the art in the U.S., its prior art effect is much greater than in other countries. This makes it worthwhile to file a patent application much earlier, even if such a patent application fails to meet the standard of a complete priority application. If a patent application is filed as early as possible, based for example on early concepts related to an invention, it will not necessarily be a direct benefit to the applicant’s priority rights, but instead it will serve as a tool to compromise the scope of potential claims of a later filer’s U.S. patent application.10 Patent applications that are not prepared to necessarily contain full enablement, description of variants and of claim scope can be called “rough provisional patent applications.” Bicycle Brake Example—Initial Concept The initial concept related to the centerpull brake was to use a pair of levers or arms to move rim-engaging pads. Let’s assume that the details of implementation were not fully understood when the initial concept was made. Only after making a prototype and testing was done, did Figure 3 the inventor fully understand the details (including the addition of the cable tension release mechanism). For the sake of the example, let’s presume that the initial conceptual drawing was provided as shown in Figure 3, namely without describing how the cable is mounted with respect to the brake, and without such mounting 10. MPEP 2121.01 cites Beckman Instruments v. LKB Produkter AB, 892 F.2d 1547, 1551, 13 USPQ2d 1301, 1304 (Fed. Cir. 1989) as stating “Even if a reference discloses an inoperative device, it is prior art for all that it teaches.” And further cites Symbol Techs. Inc. v. Opticon Inc., 935 F.2d 1569, 1578, 19 USPQ2d 1241, 1247 (Fed. Cir. 1991) as stating “A non-enabling reference may qualify as prior art for the purpose of determining obviousness under 35 U.S.C. 103.” being implicit11 (there are variety of ways to actuate the brake). If the future claim to the bicycle rim brake recites the cable mount and connection to the brake (and this is an essential component for operation, and thus a reasonable limitation to include), the description of the initial concept in a rough provisional patent application cannot support the claim according to the PCT standard of awarding priority. When products are more complex than a bicycle brake, developing the invention can take even more time. However, as soon as an R&D team identifies interest in a new technology or product, a review should be made to see if any concepts related to the technology or product should be made the subject of one or more rough provisional patent applications. U.S. patent applicants have traditionally relied on establishing dates of invention in lab books or other internal communications resulting from early work in developing a complete understanding and readiness to file a priority patent application. These dates of invention were useful for overcoming as prior art the patent applications filed by others in obviousness rejections. A similar type of effect can be achieved by filing rough provisional patent applications to early concepts of an invention being developed. While a rough provisional patent application may be considered to be weak on details or premature and may serve little or no useful priority purpose outside of the U.S., for the reasons given above, a rough provisional can and should be filed once the concept is made and before engaging the R&D process. Non-Convention PCT Option If there is any reason to believe that a rough provisional could support a claim to the invention, and an applicant wants to postpone the filing of the complete patent application, for example because of an ongoing R&D effort to properly and fully define the invention, the complete application could be filed directly as a PCT application with no priority claim to the rough provisional. This approach avoids the consideration of whether a priority claim based on a second patent 11. In this simple mechanical example, it might have been fully possible to have identified and specified the cable mount and its operation, such that a full priority would have been established. This would be beneficial to the applicant to obtain the earliest priority date. The author assumes that the elements omitted from the rough provisional were not readily available to the applicant, and would have required the effort of R&D over a number of weeks or months. December 2013 256 The Strategy Of Filing Early application can be fully effective, however, it requires filing the PCT application a year earlier than when relying on an earlier priority application. Managing Rough Provisionals The goal is to gain sufficient understanding of an invention so as to be able to file a complete priority application. When such an application is ready, the previously-filed rough provisional can be studied to see if it can serve as a basis for priority. If it cannot, then its priority value is zero for the U.S. and particularly for other countries. The complete priority application can then be filed as the priority document for the invention as it will be claimed. Separate from the question of priority is whether the rough provisional could be useful as prior art in the U.S. only against a competitor who might have filed between the filing date of the rough provisional and the filing of the complete priority application. This utility can be determined if one or more claims in the complete patent application could be considered obvious in light of the rough provisional. abstract but no substantive new subject matter. The objective is to keep the date of the rough provisional for the subject matter disclosed. It can be effective in this case to request nonpublication13 of the rough nonprovisional as it will only be filed in the U.S. A request for nonpublication can be done on filing, as long as the applicant declares that the application has not also been filed in a country with automatic 18-month publication. There is little to gain by showing the public the content of a rough provisional that is not able to support a claim in the complete priority application. And there is another advantage to be gained by keeping the rough nonprovisional secret, namely it will not become prior art until the applicant chooses to have it published. Review Early R&D Efforts File U.S. Provisional Patent Application for Concepts and Early-Stage Inventions (Rough Provisional) Rough Nonprovisionals When a rough provisional is shown to have sufficient description of the invention to support one or more claims in the complete patent application, then its priority is claimed. The rough provisional will thus become, in the U.S., prior art as of its filing date combinable with other prior art once the complete patent application is published in the U.S. An earlier-filed patent application is prior art against the same applicant’s later-filed patent application (unless priority is claimed) in most countries, but not in the U.S., where the same applicant’s earlier-filed patent applications are not prior art unless they were published more than one year12 before the filing of the later-filed application. The rough nonprovisional can only serve as prior art against third parties, and not against the applicant herself. When a rough provisional is shown to be insufficient to support a claim (as in the example of the brake concept), but sufficient when combined with the state of the art to render obvious a claim in the complete priority application (this would be the case in the example if cable actuator mounts are known in the art), the rough provisional can be maintained as a U.S. patent application separately from the complete priority patent application. This application can be called a rough nonprovisional, as it will be a formalized version of the rough provisional with a claim and 12. 35USC§102(b) 257 les Nouvelles Is a Claim in Complete Priority Patent Application Obvious in Light of Combination of Rough Provisional and Stateof-the-Art? no yes Abandon Rough Nonprovisional Review Final R&D Efforts Prepare Complete Priority Patent Application no Does Rough Provisional Support a Claim in Complete Priority Patent Application? yes File Rough U.S. Nonprovisional with Nonpublication Request Is a Claim in Competitor’s Patent Application Obvious in View of Rough Nonprovisional? yes Claim Priority to Rough Provisional in Complete Patent Application No Priority Claim to Rough Provisional 13. 35USC§122(b)(2)(B)(i) no-no action License-In from Competitor Abandon Rough Nonprovisional to Prevent Publication The Strategy Of Filing Early Rough provisional filed Company A Company B Idea for Product C is conceived Idea for Product C is conceived Prototype of Product C is tested under CDA Product C is Developed Product C is developed B’s patent application is cited for obviousness in U.S.— A has no claims allowable in USA’s application patentable outside of U.S. with claims to A’s way of making C more effective Complete patent application is filed for C Complete patent application is filed for C The duration of secrecy of the rough nonprovisional is limited to its pendency. Most U.S. patent applications are examined within two years of their nonprovisional filing date. This time period is about 3 years from the filing date of the rough provisional. This should be ample time to discover the presence of any competitor’s application filed prior to the complete priority application. If a longer pendency period is required for the rough nonprovisional, a continuation application can be filed with a further request for nonpublication. Abandonment of an unpublished rough nonprovisional can be done by not responding to an office action, not paying an issue fee, or by filing a request for express abandonment under 37CFR1.138. When a U.S. patent application is subject to a request for nonpublication, publication in a foreign patent application of the invention will cause the U.S. patent application to be considered to be abandoned.14 While there is a risk of an argument that the filing of the complete priority application in other countries should be considered an application directed to the invention disclosed in the rough nonprovisional, the consequence of such an argument would be the abandonment of the rough nonprovisional. The validity of the complete priority application in the U.S., not 14. 35USC§122(b)(2)(B)(iii) states “An applicant who has made a request under clause (i) but who subsequently files, in a foreign country or under a multilateral international agreement specified in clause (i), an application directed to the invention disclosed in the application filed in the Patent and Trademark Office, shall notify the Director of such filing not later than 45 days after the date of the filing of such foreign or international application. A failure of the applicant to provide such notice within the prescribed period shall result in the application being regarded as abandoned, unless it is shown to the satisfaction of the Director that the delay in submitting the notice was unintentional.” Rough nonprovisional filed A negotiates with B in-license of broad rights to C in exchange for abandonment of rough nonprovisional B’s application is allowable over public prior art, but compromised by potential prior art of A’s rough nonprovisional subject to a nonpublication request, is not in question as a result of the nonpublication request made in the rough nonprovisional. If the rough nonprovisional is filed without making a nonpublication request, it will be published at 18 months. This will make the prior art effect automatic in the U.S. The rough nonprovisional will not serve as prior art against the applicant’s own complete priority application in the U.S. as mentioned above. In other countries, the complete priority application must be filed before publication of the rough nonprovisional and the rough nonprovisional must not be able to support a claim in the complete priority application. In this way, the Paris Convention priority rights established by the complete priority application are whole and unharmed. In the above timeline example, Company A diligently pursues its development of Product C, while their competitor, Company B does the same. Company A takes a bit more time in its R&D than does Company B; and Company B files its patent application before Company A who files a few months after Company B, and before there is any public disclosure of the invention by either party. This scenario would normally leave Company A with some patent rights outside of the U.S., and likely very little or no rights in the U.S. However, Company A files a very rough provisional describing some concepts related to Product C, as soon as was possible. When Company A has sufficient understanding of Product C, a patent application is filed, although in hindsight shortly after B filed. Patent counsel for Company A determined that the rough provisional could not support a claim in the complete priority patent application. No priority is claimed to the rough provisional in the complete patent application for Product C. However, it is decided by counsel that the December 2013 258 The Strategy Of Filing Early disclosure of the rough provisional would, in combination with other prior art, render obvious claims to the invention in Product C. A nonprovisional of the rough provisional is therefore filed in the U.S. with a nonpublication request. Licensing-In From the First-to-File If during U.S. examination of one’s complete priority patent application, or as otherwise revealed by a patent search, a competitor’s patent application having an earlier filing date is discovered, the loss of patent scope in the U.S. due to the earlier-filed application will likely be more severe than in other countries. If the rough provisional pre-dates the filing of the earlier-filed application—meaning that work on the invention by one’s inventor’s had started before the competitor was able to file a patent application for the invention—then the consequences of being second-to-file need not be so severe in the U.S. The analysis that concluded that the rough provisional should be filed as a rough nonprovisional can be repeated for the competitor’s patent application. The claims in the competitor’s application can be studied to determine if they are vulnerable to an obviousness rejection on the basis of the rough provisional’s teachings and the whole prior art. If this is the case, then the rough nonprovisional has value. If it is unpublished, then the rough nonprovisional is a negotiation tool. If it was published, then it can be cited against the competitor’s patent application.15 The applicant of the unpublished rough nonprovisional has control over its publication,16 and its ability to be cited as prior art against the competitor’s patent application. If the rough nonprovisional is never published, it never becomes prior art and never impacts on the validity of the competitor’s future patent.17 Disclosure of the unpublished rough nonprovisional to the competitor does not create any negative consequence, as for example a duty to disclose it as prior art to the USPTO, since it is not prior art yet. The competitor can take the required time to consider the potential prior art effect of the rough nonprovisional, and the value of its never becoming prior art. 15. 35USC§122(e) allows for a published patent application to be submitted by a third party if it is done within 6 months from publication or prior to a first office action on the merits. A third party can provide prior art directly to the applicant or her patent attorney with the expectation that it will be brought to the attention of the USPTO under the duty to disclose of 37CFR1.56. 16. 35USC§122(b)(2)(B)(iv) allows for the applicant to rescind the nonpublication request. 17. Publication under 35USC§122 is a requirement for an earlier-filed application to be prior art under 35USC§102(a)(2). 259 les Nouvelles In the example of the bicycle brake, let’s presume the inventor of the side-pull brake was first to file a complete application and the inventor of the centerpull brake was first to conceive the brake. Let’s also presume the inventor of the center-pull brake files a rough provisional before the side-pull brake patent application is filed, and then files a complete patent application after the side-pull application. In this scenario, the inventor of the center-pull brake will enjoy certain rights outside the USA, but could see the claims granted outside the USA be rejected for obviousness in light of the side-pull application in the USA. However, the rough nonprovisional has the power to invalidate the side-pull patent application in the USA if it were published. The rough concept of the rim brake described in the rough provisional could, in combination with other prior art, render obvious the invention described and claimed in the side-pull brake application. Control over this publication is the bargaining chip that the inventor of the center-pull brake has over the inventor of the side-pull brake. While no one is ever pleased to offer the competition a license to one’s patent, avoiding the prior art effect of the rough nonprovisional, and possibly the invalidity of one’s broad patent claims, is a strong incentive to license. When two applicants are close in filing patent applications for the same or similar inventions, the second-to-file applicant regularly obtains partial patent rights in First-to-File countries (outside the U.S.), and the competitor might already have accepted that the second-to-file enjoys certain patent rights for the invention. The objective of a license can be to enjoy the same effective rights as in other countries, or to enjoy a full license to competitor’s patent. The ability to negotiate will depend on the potential prior art effect of the rough nonprovisional. If the potential prior art effect of the rough nonprovisional is the likely unpatentability of all meaningfully broad claims, a royalty-free, transferable license might be warranted. There is a good opportunity in the above-described scenario to negotiate a license or settlement amount for the abandonment of the rough nonprovisional. In the case that a competitor was the first-to-file a complete patent application for an invention, the goal of the license would be to give a second-to-file applicant (who filed an earlier rough provisional, followed up by an unpublished, rough nonprovisional) access to rights equal to, or better than, those offered in other jurisdictions. Licensing can become an integral part of patent procurement in the AIA framework! ■ Impact Of Kirtsaeng v. Wiley Kirtsaeng v. Wiley Incentivizes Digital Distribution 1 By Ilaria Maggioni I n Kirtsaeng v. Wiley,2 the Supreme Court ruled that once a copyrighted work has been sold by its owner anywhere in the world, it is free to be resold—including by importation into the U.S. itself. Hence, under U.S. copyright law a doctrine of “worldwide exhaustion of rights” now applies. 1) The Supreme Court’s Decision The Supreme Court relied on narrow statutoryinterpretative grounds to reach its conclusion that Kirtsaeng’s resale in the U.S. of books manufactured abroad did not infringe Wiley’s copyright under the first-sale doctrine.3 The Court held that the copies sold by Kirtsaeng were “lawfully made” under the Copyright Act and so they are subject to the first-sale exception to copyright infringement. The Supreme Court overruled the Court of Appeal for the Second Circuit’s more conventional ruling that the statutory language “lawfully made under this title” means that the first-sale doctrine does not apply to copies of American-copyrighted works manufactured abroad.4 This conventional territorial view was urged by Wiley’s geographical reading of that language essentially so that the exception would apply only to copies “made in the U.S.”; being as the “title” is in fact the copyright law of the U.S., not the world. The Supreme Court favored Kirtsaeng’s reading of the relevant language as “…imposing the nongeographical limitation made ‘in accordance with’ or ‘in compliance with’ the Copyright Act, which would permit the doctrine to apply to copies manu1. Previously published as—“Kirtsaeng v. Wiley Incentivizes Digital Distribution,” Mealey’s Litigation Report: Cyber Tech & E-Commerce, Vol. 15, #4 June 2013. 2. Kirtsaeng v. Wiley, 133 S.Ct. 1351 (2013). 3. The “first-sale” exception to copyright infringement is provided by the Copyright Act, 17 US.C. §109(a). See also Kirtsaeng v. Wiley at 1352 (2013) (“… the owner of a particular copy or phonorecord lawfully made under this title . . . is entitled, without the authority of the copyright owner, to sell or otherwise dispose of the possession of that copy or phonorecord, §109(a). Importing a copy made abroad without the copyright owner’s permission is an infringement of §106(3)”). 4. Id. at 1352. factured abroad with the copyright owner’s permission”—as were the Wiley books at issue in this case (emphasis added).5 An extensive dissenting opinion by J. Ginsburg points out that the majority’s ruling is a bold departure from “…Congress’ aim to protect copyright owners against the un■ Ilaria Maggioni, authorized importation of low-priced, foreign RKunstadtPC, made copies of their copyIP Attorney, righted works…”; and is New York, NY “all the more stunning, for it places the United E-mail: [email protected] States at the vanguard of the movement for ‘international exhaustion’ of copyrights—a movement the United States has steadfastly resisted on the world stage.”6 While the Wiley decision was saluted by some commentators as a welcome victory for consumers, it does not likely represent a game-changing paradigm outside of the print universe. Online retail of digital content should not be affected, due to its narrow reasoning and its focus on print publications. The shift to digital content, already well underway, should get a boost. 2) Digital Music The decision’s inapplicability to digital content is exemplified in a recent decision about music files. In the market for digital resale of copyrighted works, the Wiley decision had generated concern that a similar exhaustion of copyrights would be forthcoming for digital music files. In that case, a legitimate second market for digital files would be free to flourish after first sale—with revenues migrating out of the hands of original copyright owners (mostly publishers and record labels, or in some cases established independent musicians) and right into the hands of reselling websites and original first purchasers. Advocating 5. Kirtsaeng v. Wiley at 1352-1353 (2013). 6. Id. at 1373. December 2013 260 Impact Of Kirtsaeng v. Wiley for this shift are new comers like the digital cloudbased reseller website ReDigi; and established online retailers such as Amazon; and self-styled consumer organizations. However, in March 2013, shortly after the Supreme Court’s Wiley decision, the District Court for the Southern District of New York (SDNY) issued a ruling in the case Capitol Records LLC v. ReDigi Inc. holding that there is no copyright exhaustion by “first-sale” of digital music files.7 Hence, increased reliance on digital distribution may be viewed as a direct—although perhaps unintended—consequence of the Supreme Court’s Wiley decision. Since publishers no longer have control of print publications after first sale (not only made in the U.S., but now under Wiley also if made abroad), the natural market response after Wiley would be for publishers to turn to digital distribution, where publishers may retain full control under prevailing digital licensing models. The SDNY in ReDigi confirms that result for digital music. Since digital works are traditionally brought to market under non-transferable personaluse licenses—not “sold,” the first-sale doctrine so far has been held inapplicable to licensed digital works. In 2010, in the Autodesk case8 a similar issue in respect of resale of software was decided (on appeal) substantially the same way as ReDigi. The Autodesk case even dealt with a physical tangible medium (CD embodying the software) originally sold under license, resold to a third-party who in turn resold them on eBay. Supporters of exhaustion of copyrights in digital resale hoped that the Wiley decision would lead to a different ruling in ReDigi, but Wiley did not and could not effect that shift. The fundamental difference between a physical and digital product is the nature of the legal transaction that is used to handle digital versus non-digital works. That is at the core of most of these cases because normally title in non-digital works is transferred, meaning there is an actual sale, and the sale triggers the first-sale doctrine. Non-digital works are most frequently not transferred. They are provided to consumers based on a limited license which contractually restricts use and re-distribution of the work. 7. Capitol Records LLC v. ReDigi Inc., _F.Supp2d_, 2013 WL 1286134 at *9-10 (SDNY 2013). The author expected that result—as discussed in an interview with U.K. “I.P. Magazine.” “Brought to book,” I.P. Magazine (April 2013) (Copyright © I.P. Magazine 2013). 8. Vernor v. Autodesk Inc., 621 F3d 1102 (9th Cir. 2010). 261 les Nouvelles In 2010, in Vernor v. Autodesk, the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, overruled the District Court’s finding that a digital resale of Autodesk’s AutoCAD software by a third-party, who legitimately purchased it from the original buyer, was permitted by the first-sale doctrine. The Ninth Circuit agreed with Autodesk that its software was sold under a non-transferable license and so it was not subject to the first-sale doctrine.9 The Autodesk decision and now the ReDigi decision, still pose a substantial obstacle for companies looking to resell digital content.10 Apple and Amazon recently sought patent protection for cloud-based reselling models applicable to second-hand digital content. Obtaining such patents does not mean that the patent owner would be able to use them, without infringing the copyright owner’s digital content. Under the current legal framework, Amazon, Apple, ReDigi and the like, do not have much to counter with. The legal authority over copyrighted digital products still remains within the copyright owner’s control because the copyright owner retains the copyright over digital property sold under strict personal-use licenses. From a practical perspective, copyright owners may be expected to adjust to circumstances and find ways of making products that cannot easily be re-distributed after they leave the manufacturer. Copyrighted digital content might not be re-salable in practical terms. Copyright owners can add password protection and other security mechanisms, which are illegal to circumvent under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, or that make the products unmarketable because they are no longer usable on other devices; or without periodic payment of subscription fees. For example, Adobe recently transitioned to a subscription-fee based distribution model. 9. Id. at 1103-1104 (“Autodesk distributes Release 14 pursuant to a limited license agreement in which it reserves title to the software copies and imposes significant use and transfer restrictions on its customers. We determine that Autodesk’s direct customers are licensees of their copies of the software rather than owners, which has two ramifications. Because Vernor did not purchase the Release 14 copies from an owner, he may not invoke the first sale doctrine, and he also may not assert an essential step defense on behalf of his customers.”) 10. E.g., Ricardo Bilton, Apple and Amazon want to let you resell your digital stuff (if that even makes sense), VentureBeat MediaBeat Section, March 8, 2013 (http://venturebeat. com/2013/03/08/apple-amazon-resell/); and Darrell Etherington, Apple Patents A System For The Resale And Transfer Of ‘Used’ Digital Goods, TechCrunch, March 7, 2013(http://techcrunch.com/2013/03/07/apple-patents-a-system-for-the-resaleand-transfer-of-used-digital-goods/). Impact Of Kirtsaeng v. Wiley 3) Possible Effects on Exhaustion of Trademarks and Patents The Wiley decision declaring international exhaustion of copyrights may foreshadow similar exhaustion for trademarks (e.g., legitimizing pharmaceutical gray imports). The decision incentivizes publishers to phase out print publications in favor of digital distribution. Since digital works are traditionally brought to market under non-transferable personal- use licenses—not “sold,” the “first-sale” doctrine so far has not been applied to licensed digital works. While some commentators speculate that this decision may also lead to worldwide exhaustion of patent rights,11 the principle of territoriality of patents seems to have been more securely established over the years than for trademarks, which have long been the subject of controversy over the legality of “gray imports” from abroad. ■ 11. E.g., John Rothchild, The Exhaustive Consequences of Kirtsaeng, JURIST - Forum, April 29, 2013 (http://jurist. org/forum/2013/04/john-rothchild-kirtsaeng.php); and Dennis Crouch, First-Sale Doctrine: Authorized Foreign Sales Exhaust U.S. Copyrights [and US Patents], PatentlyO, March 19, 2013 (http://www.patentlyo.com/patent/2013/03/first-sale-doctrineauthorized-foreign-sales-exhaust-us-copyrights-and-us-patents. html). December 2013 262 Australian IP Licensing Introduction: The Growing Risk From Australian IP Licensing By Amalia Stone 1. Introduction: The Growing Risk From Australian IP Licensing This article seeks to examine the risk a licensor of IP may face when licensing IP in Australia, in ways that the licensor may not have anticipated. The article first examines why the risk may exist, and then looks at how Australian courts have treated the risk in relation to brand licences, copyright licences and finally patent licences. Finally, some steps are suggested to assist licensors to mitigate these risks when licensing in Australia. One of the key questions in determining a commercial strategy by which to assess your IP assets can be to ask the following question: is your business best placed to commercialise the IP asset itself, or is a third party better positioned to do so under a licence? A series of recent Australian cases has thrown into stark relief the risk a licensor is exposed to when licensing its IP in Australia, to the extent that the licensor is involved in those licensed activities. Should this change how you assess your IP assets? In this article, we look: (a) At how the risk may arise for an IP licensor in Australia in a range of situations, some of which are obvious, some of which are less so; (b) At how this issue has been treated in Australian copyright cases; (c) At how this issue has been treated in Australian patent cases, including some factors that may mean an IP licensor is at a higher risk of being found to have been involved in infringement as a joint tortfeasor, or for being liable for having authorised infringement by its licensee; and (d) At how this issue has been treated in Australian trade mark cases, including in particular some factors which may place intra-group licence arrangements at risk. Finally, we suggest some mitigation strategies to assist IP licensors in managing this risk, if you choose to license your IP into Australia. 2. Why Would An IP Licensor Be At Risk? 2.1 Licensing 101—What is an IP Licence? At the heart of an intellectual property right is the 263 les Nouvelles ability to exclude others from the use of that intellectual property—a sword to prevent, rather than a shield to defend the IP owner against third party infringement claims.1 Practically speaking, although you may own an IP right, you may be unable to use that right without infringing the rights of third parties. An IP licence is in essence an agreement by the IP owner not to take action against the licensee for acts that would otherwise infringe the owner’s IP right. If silent, a licensee may argue that the licensor has given an implied warranty that use of the relevant invention or right will not infringe third party rights. A licence is not usually viewed as carrying with it (unless expressly agreed) a positive commitment by the IP owner to protect the licensee against claims from third parties. 2.2 Involvement in Infringement There are licences, and then there are licences that come with many strings attached. For instance, an IP licence may be: • A simple agreement by a software company that a particular piece of software can be used internally within a business; • A brand licence that requires a licensee to comply with trade mark guidelines, and quality standards in relation to supply chains; • A franchise agreement that allows a licensee to use a brand, coupled with a business system, subject to compliance with operating manuals, and multiple guidelines that control in almost every way how the licensee may behave; • A covenant not to sue a licensee for acts that would otherwise infringe a patent; • A patent licence, coupled with quality standard compliance obligations, and a right to use a dossier in relation to a pharmaceuti- cal substance, with controls over where active pharmaceutical ingredients may be purchased and from whom; or 1. Although registration of trade marks gives a statutory defence to an infringement action (s 23, 122(1)(e) Trademarks Act 1995 (Cth)). Australian IP Licensing • An agreement that permits a third party to reproduce or communicate copyright material. It becomes obvious in the above examples that an IP licensor may have varying degrees of involvement or control over how the licensee may behave. That involvement or control may be legally important (as in trade marks) in order for the licensor to maintain its IP rights,2 or commercially significant to the licensor in maintaining its reputation, or important from a regulatory sense.3 But it is also that same extent of involvement and control which has the potential to expose the licensor to liability arising from the licensee’s activities in its use of the relevant IP right. The main areas for concern for a licensor are whether the licensor has authorised the licensee committing the infringing act, or whether the licensor and licensee are involved in an enterprise pursuant to a common design in the course of which the infringement occurred. Recent cases which we discuss below have been helpful in outlining what level of involvement a licensor must have to be exposed to this liability, but the lines are still not clear. The main factors boil down to: (a) The nature of any relationship existing between the licensor, and the licensee who did the infringing act; (b) The extent (if any) of the licensor’s power to prevent the doing of the infringing act; and (c) Whether the licensor took any reasonable steps to prevent or avoid the doing of the infringing act. 2.3 Statutory Issues If there is an obligation on the licensee to offer products or services under the licensor’s brand or name, the licensor may also be exposed to liability in relation to the nature or suitability of the products themselves. This risk arises under the ‘deemed manufacturer’ provisions of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth).4 2. For instance, to avoid trade mark registrations becoming vulnerable to removal for non-use, where the only use has been by the licensee, and that use has not been controlled (either control financially over the licensee, or quality control over the branded goods or services) under section 92 Trade Marks Act 1995 (Cth), or removal on the basis that the use of such trade mark has become likely to deceive or cause confusion under s 99(c) of the Trade Marks Act, because the trade mark has become associated with the licensee rather than the licensor. 3. For instance, in relation to the requirements under the Therapeutic Goods Act 1989 (Cth) for control over supply chain, issues around master drug files, the role of a sponsor. 4. s7 Australian Consumer Law. 3. Copyright Licences—Areas To Watch A copyright creator is in the best position to know whether a work or other subject matter is original and has not been copied from a third party work. However, the assessment is not always a simple one for a copyright licensor. For instance, in the case of content aggregators, publishers,5 software licensors (where software code has been written over a number of years), and entities who provide facilities for copying or communication of third party copyright works and subject matter, or for persons providing access to data derived ■ Amalia Stone, from social media sources, there are multiple Herbert Smith Freehills, sources of copyright Senior Associate, rights in play. Sydney, NSW, Australia For instance, in the 6 E-mail: [email protected] recent Larrikin case, the defendants—EMI group companies—did not themselves create the song “Down Under”—nor did EMI, of their own volition, include in the song the beautiful flute riff that was found to infringe Larrikin’s copyright in “Kookaburra Sits In The Old Gumtree.” The infringing act was done by the copyright creator of “Down Under,” namely the band Men At Work and two of its songwriting members. In the recent iiNet appeal,7 the High Court emphasised that whether or not an entity has ‘authorised’ infringement is a question to be determined based on the facts of the particular situation. In order to minimise the potential for actions to be brought on the basis of primary copyright infringement and secondary copyright infringement for authorisation,8 persons who license copyright works or other subject matter will need to ensure that they are in a position to demonstrate that they: 1. Own all copyright in that material, or 2. Have a licence to use that material in the way that it is being used, and have taken steps to prohibit 5. For instance, as in Corby v Allen & Unwin Pty Limited [2013] FCA 370. 6. Larrikin Music Publishing Pty Ltd v EMI Songs Australia Pty Limited [2010] FCA 29 (4 February 2010). 7. Roadshow Films Pty Ltd v iiNet Ltd [2012] HCA 16 (20 April 2012). 8. Under s101 of the Copyright Act 1968 (Cth), authorising infringement by another person is itself a secondary act of copyright infringement. December 2013 264 Australian IP Licensing or otherwise prevent the licensee from using the material in any other way. Copyright licensors need to take steps to assess whether they are exposed as secondary infringers due to the behaviour of their licensees, with reference to the factors discussed in Section 3 above. 4. Patent Licences—Areas To Watch Patent cases have followed similar reasoning to copyright cases in their assessment of whether a licensor has authorised infringement by a licensee. However, perhaps because of the more industrial application of patent rights, these patent cases have focused on whether the infringement has arisen in the course of an enterprise in relation to which the licensor and licensee have shared in a common design, such that the licensor and licensee are ‘joint tortfeasors’ (persons who together commit a wrongful act, either by intent or negligence). A starting point is to examine the extent to which the licensor has been involved in the licensee’s business in which the patent rights were exercised, and through which the infringement arose. 4.1 TGA Approval—Earlier Consideration In Apotex Pty Ltd v Les Laboratoires Servier,9 Bennett J found at an interlocutory level that there was sufficient evidence to find that there had been a ‘common design’. The party being joined was held to have manufactured the active ingredient for the product being sold by the primary infringer, and played an active and significant role in obtaining and maintaining Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) approval for the product. 4.2 Sales of Product to Licensee The Apotex case referred to Unilever PLC v Gillette (UK) Ltd.10 which found that an overseas parent company could be joined to an infringement action against the local company where the parent company: 1. Wholly owned the local company; 2. Sold the allegedly infringing product to the local company; 3. Was aware of the patent claimed to be infringed; 4. Was party to a know how agreement with the local company; 5. Exercised a worldwide right to veto products to be marketed by the local company (and other subsidiaries); and 9. (No 4) [2010] FCA 1202. 10. [1989] RPC 583. 265 les Nouvelles 6. Benefited from sales through direct profits and royalties payable under the know how and licence agreement. 4.3 Not Enough to Manufacture or be Involved in TGA Approval? In Apotex Pty Ltd. v Les Laboratoires Servier,11 Bennett J stated that: “to show infringement by common design, it is necessary to demonstrate some act in furtherance of the common design’, and that it was insufficient, by itself, to show that there is a close relationship between two companies, or that a company group is ‘vertically integrated’... the fact that Apotex P...is itself the manufacturer, or directs the manufacture of the PAI, or provides information to the TGA for the Apotex Product is not sufficient to make out a prima facie case of authorisation of infringement or of joint tortfeasance by common design to infringe.” However, Bennett J was prepared to find that there may be a prima facie case (that is, a case that appears to have merit on first review) of ‘common design’ considering those elements, and others, together, although no tort was found to which the Apotex party may have been the joint tortfeasor (that is, a party who together with another has caused the tort or injury). Bennett J considered authorisation separately, in relation to which she commented that “neither mere facilitation nor mere indifference may be sufficient to constitute authorisation…knowledge that infringement is likely to occur does not necessarily amount to authorisation.” 4.4 Global Development and Manufacture Most recently in Bayer Pharma Aktiengesellschaft v Genentech Inc,12 Bennett J was prepared to find that there was a prima facie case of joint tortfeasorship on facts where the overseas licensor, Regeneron: 1. Was party to a license and collaboration agreement with the local party; 2. Announced that the parties were collabo rating in relation to global development; 3. Manufactured the licensed product; 4. Shared development costs and profits from sales worldwide (other than USA); 5. Jointly owned copyright in promotional materials; 11. (No 2) [2012] FCA 748. 12. [2012] FCS 1467 (interlocutory). Australian IP Licensing 6. Had a right to review and comment on major promotional materials; and 7. Had processes around exchange of informa tion to comply with regulatory obligations. Because Bennett J found that there was a prima facie case that Regeneron was a joint tortfeasor with Bayer, she did not go on to make a determination about authorisation. 4.5 Some Risk Factors From the above cases, the lesson for patent licensors is that a patent licensor may increase the risk of secondary liability for patent infringement through its licensee’s acts if certain factors are present, for example: a. The licensor is aware of the patent that may be infringed by the licensee. This may be relevant in pharmaceutical licensing. In tech nology licensing, the licensor may be less likely to be aware. b. The licensor makes and sells to the licensee the product or process that allegedly in fringes. This may be relevant in pharmaceut ical licensing and some technology licences. c. The licensor characterises the relationship as ‘collaboration’ or as part of a general development/commercialisation plan by the licensor (e.g. local partner). This may be relevant in some pharmaceutical licences and some software licences. d. The licensor is the parent company of the licensee (or otherwise above the licensee in a company group ownership structure). e. The licensor shares know how with the licen see, or acts in joint effort to develop the product or process which allegedly infringes. Often licences include an initial period in which the licensor shares know how with the licensee. Sometimes there is an ongoing obligation for both parties to share improve- ments or know how. Sometimes, for relationship purposes, the parties even describe a licence as a ‘collaboration’. In other matters, parties are actually partici pating in a project to develop, or collaborate in a centre or consortium, and the agreement contains the outlines of commercialisation rights for each party—without dealing com- pletely with liability. f. The licensor controls the way in which the allegedly infringing product or process is promoted. g. The licensor is actively involved in seeking TGA (or other regulatory approval) for a TGA regulated product or process. This is particularly relevant for pharmaceuticals and other therapeutic goods, where licensors licence dossiers and are actively involved as sponsor or otherwise in the TGA application. h. The licensor benefits from sales of the allegedly infringing product or process. This is usually the case. A patent licensor may also run the risk of authorising infringing acts (although the factors to support liability have not been as well specified in the cases) if the licensor: • Was aware of the patent likely to be infringed; and • Had the power to stop the licensee’s allegedly infringing activities; and • Did not require the licensee to take reason able steps to avoid the infringement. 5. Brand Licences—Areas To Watch There are not many Australian cases that focus on the relationship between trade mark licensors and licensees, but a recent case has shown that the same principles come into play in the trade mark arena, as for copyright and patents. In SMA Solar Technology AG v Beyond Building Systems Pty Ltd.,13 SMA sued not only the user of the allegedly infringing trade mark (BBS), but also Ipevo, the licensor. Ipevo was held liable for the infringement on two grounds: (a) Knowing involvement in the infringement. Ipevo shared a common director with BBS, who executed the licence agreement be tween BBS and Ipevo on behalf of both companies. The court was prepared to find that that person must have been aware of the infringement, and therefore that Ipevo as licensor was knowingly involved in the infringement by licensing the infringing mark to BBS. (b) Ipevo’s joint tortfeasorship with BBS as acting in concert with BBS in the infringe- ment. Unfortunately, the decision did not go into detail as to what would be required in order to show that in the brand 13. (No 5) [2012] FCA 1483. December 2013 266 Australian IP Licensing context “two or more people …had acted in concert in committing the tort.”14 This raises alarm bells for any intra-group trade mark licence, where there is a relationship between the licensor and licensee, such that knowledge of the licensee as to the local brand landscape may be imputed to the licensor. 6. Accepting The Inevitable—Next Steps So, the lesson across the board is that any sort of licensing of IP may expose a licensor to liability for infringement arising from its licensee’s activities. It is likely that this risk is present to a greater or lesser extent for IP licensors in other jurisdictions (such as the UK15 and the USA16) with similar jurisprudence, in particular in situations where there is a company relationship in place between licensor and licensee. How then is a licensor to deal with that risk? Some mitigation strategies include: a. Patent and trade mark searches. Licensors could conduct infringement searches in each relevant jurisdiction where it intends to use the technology or brand or to license a third party. This would give the licensor a better view of what the possible liability may be in practice. Of course, no infringement search can ever be definitive. b. Copyright clearance. Licensors could seek to research the history behind the work or subject matter to confirm that they have all necessary assignments or licences for the desired use. c. Technological protection measures (in relation to digital copyright products). Licensors could seek to block any unlicensed uses (for instance, DRMs). However, what can be developed by one smart person can be worked around by another, and this will never provide complete or continual protection against unlicensed use. d. Indemnity. If a licensor licenses a third party 14. It appears that this was not disputed, rather that Ipevo sought to establish that BBS’s acts had not been licensed by Ipevo. The court referred to Thompson v Australian Capital Television Pty Ltd [1996] HCA 38, (1996) 186 CLR 574 in establishing the necessary test. 15. Unilever PLC v Gillette (UK) Ltd, see note 10. 16. For instance, see “New Concerns Over Product Liability Risk for Trade mark Licensors”, Lee J Eulgen Neal Gerber & Eisenberg, http://www.ngelaw.com/alert/product-liability-risk-for-trademarklicensors/. 267 les Nouvelles to use or commercialise, it could seek to include an appropriate indemnity, and requirements on the licensee to obtain appropriate professional indemnity insurance to support the indemnity. However, there will be a risk that an intellectual property infringement suit will exceed the licensee’s ability to indemnify, or the amount of insurance taken out. e. Exclusion of warranties. If the licensor licenses a third party to use or to commercialise, it could do so on a no warranties, no representation basis, in order to support that the licensee undertakes the activities at its risk. f. No training / know how / marketing input / branding/supply of licensed product / shared development or commercialisation plan. If the licensor licenses a third party to use or commercialise, it could seek to do so as a bare licence. The licence would not include assistance obligations on the licensor, and would structure fees so that it is clear that the licensor is not participating in the commercialisation activity other than licensing the patent to the licensee. While this will not prevent a third party from bringing an action against the licensee, structuring the licence in this way would seek to support that there is no ‘common design’ between the parties. However, this may not match the commercial relationship between the parties in practice. A court will look behind the written terms of the licence to see whether those elements are present—the absence of them from the licence agreement itself will not be conclusive. There is no avoiding the risk that licensing your IP may bring, unless you choose not to license your IP assets. Licensing your IP assets in Australia may still be a sound commercial strategy, provided that you take steps to manage and mitigate the associated risks. ■ Evolving IP In Turkey Evolving Intellectual Property Regimes In Turkey And University Inventions: The New Article 6 Of The Patent Law And Its Impact On University Inventions By Omer Hiziroglu and Iclal Arguc W hen it comes to technology transfer activities Turkey is really not on the map, yet. Lately, Turkey’s dynamic economy is attracting a lot of international attention with a financial sector that is stronger than ever in a Europe that is struggling with economic crises. Nevertheless, delays in the judicial and legislative processes, weak intellectual property protection and low R&D spending may impede the Turkish government’s ambitious target to take place among the top 10 economies in the world by the year 2023. Recently, Turkish government has become aware that in order to build a long term sustainable growth and build its competitive edge, technology is a must. Thus, among other government driven initiatives some key measures have been taken to strengthen university research and the current laws on intellectual property. However, these initiatives while worthwhile and necessary do have some shortcomings and present a few challenges for technology transfer and IP professionals. In leading knowledge-based economies, universities have been an important source of new, innovative technologies and products. While whether universities should stray from basic research and education to applied research and commercialization avenues is an ongoing debate, the fact is that universities contribute a great deal to technological innovation and to new products hitting the market via their spinoff or licensing activities. Some well known examples coming out of university research1 that changed the market range from Gatorade, CAT scan, LCDs, to your run of the mill large multinational powerhouses such as Google and Yahoo. In 2011, U.S. universities took the first four places of the top five among universities with the most PCT applications published, with 583 applications in total. Incidentally, the fifth university is the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology with 103 applications.2 Turkey is currently considerably behind with regards to university originated inventions being ■ Omer Hiziroglu, commercialized. Change, Inovent, however, is on the horiGeneral Manager, zon for those stakeholdIstanbul, Turkey ers with some vision and E-mail: omer.hiziroglu@ patience. Three governinovent.com.tr ment incentives in particular should be noted: the revision of the De■ Iclal Arguc, cree Law 551 (“DL 551”) Sabanci University, on patents that contains Technology Transfer Specialist, important changes reIstanbul, Turkey garding inventions made E-mail: [email protected] within universities, TUBITAK’s (The Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey) new grant 1513 to promote the creation of technology transfer offices (“TTO”) within universities, PROs and research or technology parks, and finally the publication of Turkey’s top innovative and entrepreneurial universities index by Ministry of Science, Industry and Technology (“MSIT”). Currently, out of 170 or so universities in Turkey, less than a handful have a dedicated technology transfer office (“TTO”). Of those, Sabanci University is leading the pack, having been engaged in technology transfer and commercialization activities since 2005. We should also note the substantial advances made in the recent years by other universities, in particular METU (Middle East Technical University), a public university leveraging its huge academic resources and the know how of its academicians, coming up with very interesting inventions and the efforts of 1. http://www.ipadvocate.org/pdfs/Uni%20Inventions%20 Changed%20the%20World.pdf. 2 . h t t p : / / w w w. u n i v e r s i t y w o r l d n e w s . c o m / a r t i c l e . php?story=20120309132555536. December 2013 268 Evolving IP In Turkey its TTO to commercialize resulting patents are to be recommended. Bosphorus University and Ege University (EBILTEM Program) have also made substantial progress in this regard. A relatively younger university, Özye University has also made an important impact in a very short time span, not so much in technology transfer space, but in its focus on entrepreneurship with the launch of very successful “Startup Factory” within the university supporting early stage entrepreneurship. Those other universities with a dedicated TTO are engaged more in project management and industry liaison type activities: trying to build a more robust industry sponsored project portfolio, often leveraging government or EU grants. While these efforts are worthwhile, technology transfer in the sense of licensing university technology to industry is almost non-existent and certainly not the priority for most university administrators or for that matter industrial partners. At the risk of oversimplifying the issue, we can point to two main reasons: i) universities, for the reasons to be explained below, have no IP portfolios that can be monetized by way of licensing; and ii) industry has yet to see Turkish universities as a potentially important and viable source of core commercial technologies. While there is no verifiable data, it is not surprising that Sabanci University is the only Turkish university, known to the authors that has licensed technologies to industrial partners that are in fact generating royalties. This general picture is, however, grossly misleading regarding the innovative potential of Turkish universities. Indeed, while most universities are not engaged in TTO activities, there are an unknown number of patent applications filed by professors independently from their universities. One reason for this is that current DL 551 still has what is known as “professor’s privilege” in its article 41, referring to an exception to employee inventions principle that allocates the ownership rights of employee inventions to the employers, provided that such inventions were a result of the employee-employer relationship. Thus, until the new draft on the DL 551 is adopted, inventions made within universities belong to the professors and not to the university. The other reason for almost non-existent patent portfolios within universities or commercialized university originated products is that IP rights have never been a strategic consideration for most universities, especially within state universities, despite considerable accumulation of knowledge and brain power that these universities can rely upon to launch a very successful technology transfer activity. 269 les Nouvelles Three separate government initiatives that will impact commercialization activities within universities are elaborated more in detail below. 1). Revisions to the Patent Law (Decree Law 551) The new draft patent law has been in the pipeline for a long time and does indeed contain important revisions (thus cause for debate) most of which are beyond the scope of this paper. The text is currently in front of the Turkish Parliament and is expected to pass this summer. Among the most critical changes contained in the text is the removal of the exception to employee inventions for academic inventions at the universities (the so called “Professor’s privilege”), modifying the current article 41 of the DL 551. New article 6 in the draft text states in its pertinent part that for inventions resulting from scientific research at higher education institutions shall be subject to the provisions regarding employee inventions. The inventor is required to submit an invention disclosure form to the university and the university has to elect in a timely manner (as specified in a separate regulation) whether to retain ownership rights on the invention. In the event the university elects to retain the rights, the university has to file for a patent protection. If the university elects not to retain ownership rights or does not file for protection within the term specified by the regulation, the invention then becomes a free invention and inventor is free to apply for a patent protection in his or her name. If, at the time inventor submits the invention disclosure form, a patent application has already been filed by the inventor, the university can ask Turkish Patent Institute to be registered as the applicant. The university may elect not to claim ownership rights and propose to assign the application or the patent to the inventor. In such an event, university may choose to reserve a licensed right to use and exploit the invention. This license, however, cannot be exclusive and the university is required to pay the inventor a reasonable license fee. The new article 6 also touches upon the potential revenues generated by the invention in the event of successful commercialization of the invention by the university. The university is required to allocate at least 1/3 of the total revenues to the inventor. What is considered “revenue” is however not defined by the lawmaker. It is also not clear whether the university takes into account patent prosecution cost before determining the net revenue generated. This begs Evolving IP In Turkey to question on what will happen if the university’s TTO elects to pursue alternative methods of revenue generation such as cross licensing or receiving equity from a startup in consideration for the license. The issue may be even more complicated in the event that the university chooses to monetize by litigation and to legally enforce the patent against a third party infringer. If, after what is bound to be a very expensive process, the university receives a settlement or damages, should the university allocate to the inventor 1/3 of the total monies awarded or the net amount after discounting litigation costs? We can assume that some of these questions will be addressed later on as issues arise through actual practice. A corollary issue that may challenge the TTOs is whether this article requires maximizing the potential financial returns on a patent that can often be at odds with the university’s overall strategies, policies or cultural approach, not to mention difficult to ascertain. Unlike the current article 41 that dealt specifically with “academic staff” (professors, paid post-docs, etc—a term defined by the Law on Higher Education, 2547, 1981) the current article 6 is not as precise and refers in determining its scope to “inventor” for inventions made within higher education institutions. While the issue may be dealt with in a separate regulation, without further qualification, one question is whether undergraduate and graduate students as well as other university personnel are subject to article 6. The article 6 however specifies, by reference to law on Higher Education, ownership rights for research conducted under specific research agreements with public or private institutions by adjunct faculty, interns, teaching assistants and students shall be determined by an agreement between the parties, arguably the university and the institution, party to the research agreement. A particularly disturbing paragraph in article 6 is the university’s obligation to indemnify the inventor in the event the application or the patent right “ends for whatever reason.” First issue is why the university has to indemnify the inventor if the university is the rightful holder of property interests on the patent (as in the case of employee inventions). It is unclear whether the law maker intended, erroneously, to reserve a conditional retroactive ownership right in the inventor. The second issue that law maker has clearly not considered is the extreme difficulty in evaluating early stage technologies. Arguably such an evaluation will be the basis of the indemnification and Turkish courts are presently ill equipped to handle patent valuation exercises. In the event there is mysterious formula to accurately evaluate early stage technologies that is not known to this author, the corollary question is in which national markets we will try to evaluate the potential value of the patent application? The potential value is likely to be very different in Turkey, in Europe or worldwide. What will happen if a national application is granted but the PCT application succeeds in countries A and B, but fails in countries C and D? In addition, does the TTO’s mandate indirectly include implementing an international protection strategy (with the required market research and considerable in house and out-sourced costs) to maximize value? What happens if the TTO files for a national protection, unaware or ignoring foreign commercial potential, that turns into a national patent that has little or no commercial value in the national market? Did the law maker consider the fact that one can modify claim structures in the application by considerably narrowing the scope of the protection in order to have an issued patent (thus avoiding the indemnification obligation) that does not provide a real useful protection on what was initially expected? What about if the application fails due to prior art hurdles, as a result of invalidation action (costly to defend) or because of patent attorneys’ malpractice? Who bears the liability if patent attorneys drop the ball? All in all, these two lines of the article 6 are ill considered and may create new form of “ambulance chasing” lawyers flirting with professors waiting for an opportunity to sue universities. Thus a type of patent troll can rise trying to build a portfolio of disgruntled professors ready to pounce on unsuspecting TTOs. The end result is that universities, naturally risk averse, will be pushed to not claim ownership of university borne technologies, thus defeating the main purpose of article 6, that is to push universities to build a patent portfolio, increase their technology transfer activities, creating a functioning and sustainable TTO to contribute to knowledge dissemination, job creation and creating financial and non-financial impact in society. 2). Publication of University IP and Innovation Index This year, the Ministry of Science, Industry and Technology published for the second time an index ranking Turkish universities based on their entrepreneurial and innovative activities. Of the 170 universities in Turkey, Sabanci University had come on top of this index for the first year with 84 points while METU (ODTU) was in the second place with December 2013 270 Evolving IP In Turkey 83 points. For the second year, METU is placed first with 86 points (an increase of 3 points) and Sabanci University is trailing on the second place by a mere 0.2 points with a total score of 85.8 points The 2013 index has just been recently published on July 8th, 2013. Table 1 shows the ranking of ten universities in the entrepreneurial and innovative universities index 2012 and 2013 and Table 2 presents how the index takes into account 20 odd factors grouped under 5 main categories. 1. Scientific and research capacity: This category has a weight of 20 percent on the overall ranking and takes into account factors such as scientific publications and citations, as well as R&D projects that have received national or international grants and number of PhD students. 2. IP Portfolio: This category has a weight of 15 percent and takes into consideration number of patents, patent applications (including utility model applications) and PCT applications. Table 1. The Entrepreneurial And Innovative University Index 2012 No. University Total Scientific & Technological Research Competence Intellectual Property Pool Cooperation & Interaction 1 Sabanci University 84 19,2 9,2 25,0 12,5 18,3 2 Orta Dogu Teknik University 83 18,9 10,6 22,2 12,2 18,8 3 Ihsan Dogramaci University 70 18,3 6,5 22,8 4,5 18,2 4 Ozyegin University 69 13,3 6,5 19,3 10,9 18,8 Entrepreneurship Economic & Innovation Impact & Culture Commercialization 5 Istanbul Teknik University 67 15,9 7,8 20,1 7,4 15,9 6 Bogazici University 65 19,0 0,9 24,2 3,4 17,1 7 Izmir Yuksek University 58 18,8 1,8 18,1 3,3 16,2 8 Koc University 57 17,2 5,9 22,2 9,9 2,2 9 Gebze Yuksek Institute of Technology 57 18,4 3,8 17,5 6,3 11,1 10 TOBB Ekonomi ve Teknoloji University 54 16,1 0,0 19,2 6,8 12,2 Table 1.1 The Entrepreneurial And Innovative University Index 2013 271 No. University Total Scientific & Technological Research Competence 1 Orta Dogu Teknik University 86,0 19,2 11,2 22,9 15,0 18,8 2 Sabanci University 85,8 20,0 10,1 25,0 13,4 17,3 3 Ihsan Dogramaci University 82,7 19,9 9,6 23,3 11,9 18,0 Intellectual Property Pool Cooperation & Interaction Entrepreneurship Economic & Innovation Impact & Culture Commercialization 4 Bogazici University 76,3 20,0 7,3 22,8 11,1 15,1 5 Istanbul Teknik University 72,5 16,2 7,7 20,9 9,2 18,5 6 Izmir Yuksek University 68,1 19,8 3,8 22,0 5,8 16,9 7 Ozyegin University 67,4 11,9 3,8 22,0 13,7 17,1 8 Koc University 61,7 17,1 7,5 23,8 9,6 3,6 9 TOBB Ekonomi ve Teknoloji University 57,0 16,7 3,8 19,7 2,3 14,6 10 Hacettepe University 56,7 14,8 6,3 16,2 9,4 10,0 les Nouvelles Evolving IP In Turkey Table 2. Extent of the Entrepreneurial & Innovative University Index Dimension 1: Scientific and Technological Research Competence Ratio (Weight Ratio: 20%) • Number of Scientific Publications • Number of Citations • Number of Projects Taken from R&D and Innovation Support Programs • Fund Sum Taken from R&D and Innovation Support Programs • Number of National and International Science Awards • Number of PhD Graduates Dimension 2: Intellectual Property Pool (Weight Ratio: 15%) • Number of Patent Applications • Number of Patent Documents • Number of Useful Model/Industrial Design Documents • Number of International Patent Applications Dimension 3: Cooperation and Interaction (Weight Ratio: 25%) Dimension 4: Entrepreneurship and Innovation Culture (Weight Ratio: 15%) • Number of R&D and Innovation Projects Carried Out in the University-Industry Cooperation • Fund Sum Taken from the Projects Carried Out in the University-Industry Cooperation • Number of R&D and Innovation Projects Carried Out with International Cooperation • Fund Sum Acquired from the International R&D and Innovation Cooperations • Number of Students/Academic Members in Exchange • Number of Entrepreneurship, Technology Management and Innovation Management Courses on Undergraduate and Graduate Level • Number of Full-time Employees Working in Technology Transfer • The Existence of Technology Transfer Office Structuring • Fund Sum Acquired from the International R&D and Innovation Cooperations • Number of Entrepreneurship, Technology Management and Innovation Management Training/Certificate Programs Intended for Outside Universities Dimension 5: Economic Impact and Commercialization (Weight Ratio: 25%) • Number of Active Firms Where the Academicians are Shareholders or Owners in Technoparks, Incubation Centers and TEKMERs • Number of Active Firms where the University Students or the Graduates of the Last Five Years are Shareholders or Owners in Technoparks, Incubation Centers and TEKMERs • Number of Employees in the Firms where the Academicians are Shareholders or Owners in Technoparks, Incubation Centers and TEKMERs • Number of Licensed Patented/Useful Model/Industrial Designs 3. University-Industry relations and collaborative projects: This category has a weight of 25 percent and takes into considerations factors such as R&D projects in the context of University-Industry collaborations, amount of grants received and number of students and professors involved in exchange programs. 4. Entrepreneurship and innovative culture (weight of 15 percent): This category takes into consideration undergraduate and graduate level entrepreneurship courses, whether the university has a TTO (including number of full time TTO staff) as well the number of workshops and training programs conducted outside the university on entrepreneurship, technology and innovation management. 5. Economic impact and commercialization: This category has a weight of 25 percent and takes into account the number of startups in technology parks and technology development zones where professors and/or students (or recent graduates) hold equity, jobs created by these startups as well as number of licensed patents, utility models and industrial design rights by universities. December 2013 272 Evolving IP In Turkey This index, while positive, has a few shortcomings: 1. With regards to IP portfolio size, the index takes into account the number of applications and registered patents (including utility models) not taking into account whether the patents were issued or the portfolio represents a commercial value. Arguably the fact that commercial value generated is not being taken into account is balanced to a certain extent in the number of licenses (again numbers and not the value of the license), the index nevertheless follows the erroneous “quantity has a quality of its own” approach, motivating universities to patent even the most frivolous inventions. 2. While this index does not presume to quantify the best academic institutions in Turkey, based on public perception it does present a strong and persuasive tool for universities to market themselves to attract the best students. Competing for the best students is, in itself, not wrong but the fairness and the accuracy of these metrics may be misleading. 3. Universities may, in trying to acquire a larger patent portfolio start pressing academicians for a greater number of invention disclosures, the same way the academicians often find themselves pressured to publish scientific articles (at the very basic level these two requirements, if not well managed by a TTO may be mutually exclusive). It is also important that senior university administrators understand that an increased number of invention disclosures is often the result of an increased research budget. Expecting a larger number of disclosures without creating the research means to do so will also lead to, what at best can be described as, useless patents. In addition, the pressure to file invention disclosures will be felt more by academicians in engineering departments as opposed to faculty in the social sciences. The pressure will also be felt differently by scientists focused on basic and theoretical sciences. Finally, universities who are strong on social sciences will have a harder time to aim for higher ranks within the index. 4. Finally, while important, one can question whether patents on their own are a valid indicator of scientific output or innovative capacity.3 3. Richard Gold: http://www.universityworldnews.com/article. php?story=20120309132555536. 273 les Nouvelles 3). Government Funding for Technology Transfer Offices This year TUBITAK has announced a comprehensive and substantial grant program to support universities in setting up technology transfer activities (1513 grants). Only the universities ranking in the top 50 of the innovation and entrepreneurship index (described above) were eligible for the grant. From those eligible, only 10 universities received the grant this year. The grant is substantial: 1 million Turkish Liras (about USD 650.000) per year for 5 years with an option to extend for another 5 years at TUBITAK’s election. The grant is anchored around 5 modules: 1. Awareness building activities on IP rights, technology transfer, grant management, etc. 2. Building infrastructure to manage grant programs. 3. Project creation activities and management (sponsored research and industrial liaisons in the context of industry—university collaboration). 4. Technology transfer office activities, licensing and IP rights/portfolio management. 5. Entrepreneurship and startup creation. This grant call will be renewed every year, thus more and more universities will have an incentive to set up their own TTOs. Note that, of the five modules for which grant can be sought, only two are directly related to a TTO functions. One very positive mid-term impact of the grant is to put, the often ignored IP rights and technology transfer activities, on the map for senior university administrators. A few parting comments: technology transfer requires professionals with a very specific skill set and such professionals are still very few in Turkey. University leaders and stake holders also have to manage their expectations with regards to expected impact of successful TTOs. I believe two facts can be taken as given: i) building a successful TTO takes a long time and TTO activities depend a great deal on the internal and external ecosystem (i.e.: availability of risk/angel capital, industrial partners willingness to engage universities, etc.), ii) a TTO that is under pressure to show profits is likely to be very unsuccessful, thus care should be taken not to benchmark Turkish TTOs performances with AUTM’s heavy hitters who are able to generate very large sums of licensing income. One negative and immediate impact of this grant Evolving IP In Turkey program was the proliferation of so-called technology transfer and IP portfolio management “experts” (often patent agent spinoffs with absolutely no experience in technology transfer) hoping to get a piece of the pie by selling their “expertise” flooding universities with their service offers. Such an opportunistic approach will only serve the cloud that is the already not-thatclear IP and technology transfer ecosystem in Turkey. In summary, Turkey has made incredible progress within the last five year regarding the importance of IP rights, role of universities in technology creation and overall awareness creation. The efforts, in particular those of the MSIT, TUBITAK and Turkish Patent Institute are worthwhile and should be encouraged. Better and increased collaboration between government actors, NGOs (such as LES), universities and private sector, including qualified service providers is still much needed. Thus to answer a child’s favorite question, “Are we there yet?”; my answer is not yet, but at least the journey has started. ■ December 2013 274 University Technology Transfer Phases Of Growth In University Technology Transfer By Tom Hockaday Introduction T his paper describes phases that university technology transfer activities have passed through up to the present day, and suggests possible future developments. One of the conclusions is that some technology transfer offices may close, but only in universities that do not appreciate the non-commercial benefits that come from pursuing the commercial route for transferring technologies from a university. The Phases Identified Can Be Labelled As Followed: Phase 1 The ‘old days’ Up to late 1980s Phase 2 The ‘heydays’ Mid 1990s to late 2000s Phase 3 The ‘winds of change’ Early 2010s Phase 4 Economic pressures Nowadays Phase 5 Impacts of Impact Looking ahead primarily related to interactions between university researchers and people in industry. In this phase there were a small number of small scale interactions between researchers and industry. These were often based on contacts between university researchers and their past-students now working in industry. In addition, there were a small number of large scale connections where industry was funding a substantial programme of research in a university department. The research funding environment was far more straightforward than it is today. Research was funded one way or another, by various units of government, research and grants councils. University technology transfer offices (TTO’s) did not exist. Universities were developing industrial liaison offices of one sort or another, often staffed by university researchers who were interested in engaging with industry. These ‘ILO’s’ were involved in supporting a vast array of university industry interactions: industry research funding arrangements, academic consulting, intellectual property licensing. Phase 2—The ‘Heydays’ The paper and the phases most closely follow the development of activities and chronology in the UK, although also draw on experience and observations over many years from many universities in many countries. The phases are described in sequence, with reference to accompanying slides, and followed by a discussion of some of the possible consequences. As university researchers interacted more with industry they began to realise the value of the intellectual property arising from their research activities. The growing interest shown by industry in the ideas, technologies and expertise in universities helped universities recognise the value of what they had. Phase 1—The ‘Old Days’ The university is shown with a porous, flexible boundary. Universities are constantly changing size and shape, how they position themselves in the world and how the world perceives them. The line is porous as there is constant interaction in and out of universities between students, staff and people from industry, government, financiers, philanthropists, press, all walks of life. This paper is 275 les Nouvelles University, Researchers Phase 1—The ‘Old Days’ Research just got funded somehow, anyway, by government? Occasional interactions with industry, ex-students Industry University Technology Transfer In the UK, this was coupled with the high profile example of UK universities and industry failing to capture substantial value from monoclonal antibody technology first developed in Cambridge in the early 1980s. This in turn rekindled memory of the wealth generated outside of Britain from the Oxforddeveloped penicillin. Universities began to set up their own technology transfer offices, and government encouraged this. Oxford University set up Isis Innovation Ltd as its wholly owned technology transfer company in 1988. This was relatively early; by the early 2000s most UK universities had started a technology transfer office of one sort or another. UK experience lagged U.S. experience by a few years. The U.S. equivalent of the 1985 UK legislation that allowed university driven technology transfer, was the 1980 Bayh-Dole legislation. The TTO’s played a role in managing an increasing number, but never all, of a university’s interactions with industry. TTO’s that tried to dominate and police interactions with industry usually struggled against the understandable resistance from researchers who did not need looking after in the way the TTO envisaged. The wise TTO’s realised that the key to success was ‘to help researchers who wanted help commercialising the results of their research’ (an Isis motto since the late 1990s). University TTO’s grew in size, learning what to count and how to present it as evidence of good things happening, in their universities and in local and national economies. Governments liked what they saw, in their minds converting numbers of patent filings and new companies into direct ■ Tom Hockaday, evidence of sustainable economic growth. Isis Innovation Ltd., Governments provided Managing Director, grants and TTO’s grew Oxford, United Kingdom further. E-mail: tom.hockaday@ Phase 3—The ‘Winds isis.ox.ac.uk of Change’ University TTO’s matured, developing more organised and professional project management processes and staff learning and development programmes. Understanding and satisfying the objecPhase 2—The ‘Heydays’ tives of TTO’s is a complicated subject. Some see TTO’s as a quick route to financial Increasing interactions with industry, riches. If University A is making a hundred technology companies, 2-way flows. million dollars a year in technology transfer Recognition of value of IP, creation of TTOs. patent royalties (almost inevitably from a life sciences blockbuster), and the senior administrators at University B think they are Technology University, Industry Transfer better, then they expect substantial financial Researchers Office success through royalties as well. Others understand the reality that: it takes a very long time to establish a successful technology transfer programme in a university; success is as much about connecting university technologies with industry as making money. The activity is called techPhase 3—The ‘Winds Of Change’ nology transfer; it is all about transferring TTO’s mature, some thrive, many struggle. technology; TTO’s are not called ‘get rich Research collaborations with Industry become quick’ offices. far more important to researchers [why? weak economy, pressure from government]. The debate settled into an understanding of TTO’s having two main objectives: primarily to transfer technologies to industry Technology University, Industry Transfer so the technologies receive the investment Researchers Office required to deliver better products and services to people in society; and secondarily to generate financial returns for the host university and its researchers. Researchers now view IP differently, as a Nevertheless, many TTO’s struggled to means to research funding, not only TT deals. break even after a number of years, and December 2013 276 University Technology Transfer their universities questioned the best approach. Some more flexible models and approaches to satisfy the changing ways researchers view the use of IP. universities in the UK passed the challenge over to the private sector, contracting or partnering with In industry, a number of companies in various suppliers of technology transfer services. However, industry sectors were changing their models of busithis does not change the fact that it is a rare blend ness, not least in terms of opening up to open innovaof the right science, the right business management tion [see Henry Chesbrough—Open Innovation, 2003 competencies, and the right marketplace that leads and Onwards]. Companies reviewed their models of to success taking a new technology to market. interacting with universities, a number wanting to You can only measure the measureable. TTO’s conestablish long-term collaborative partnerships with tinued to measure and count disclosures, patents, selected universities; with the plans for commerspin-outs, income. In many ways the availability of cialising the IP being tied down in research funding things to count held back an understanding of what agreements at the start, not technology licences after technology transfer is really about for universities the research is done. Other companies have moved and society. TTO’s need to count these things for in an opposite direction, becoming less innovative, internal management purposes; and people paying relying on technologies at higher ‘technology readithe bills want evidence that things are happening. ness levels’, expanding the gap between university But it took a while for the real story to become about research and industry. the stories that affect everybody’s daily lives—betThere is a general shift from viewing all companies ter medicines, diagnostics, cleaner technologies, in the broad category of industry, and that being safer materials, better mobile phones, even comsomething the TTO dealt with; towards recogniputer games—and demonstrating one aspect of tion amongst researchers that companies should how important universities are to society and how be viewed in different ways. Is the opportunity for universities can add to sustainable economic growth ‘research funding now’ rather than ‘licence and wait’? to satisfy government interests. Researchers continue to want help from the experts There was another big change taking place as in the TTO but in new ways. TTO’s are asked to spend well. Research collaborations with industry were more time supporting research funding applications, becoming far more important to researchers than either because they involve IP negotiations in research in the past. The ’global financial crisis’ of 2008 and funding discussions with industry, or because govonwards cut research funding from public sector ernment/not-for-profit research funders want more sources and from not-for-profits dependent upon evidence of how their money will see ideas reach public donation and endowment investment returns. through to the end-use (consumer or patient). Researchers were encouraged by need, and governSuccessful TTO’s are run as businesses, staffed by ment, to develop research funding partnerships business-minded people. They will leave if the busiinvolving industry. The existing and potential IP ness elements of the job disappear. The university was seen as an important carrot to attract industry is then not well-placed to provide a professional research money. This had the direct effect that technology transfer function when the need arises. researchers were less interested in retaining their IP freedoms to explore the commercial routes through the TTO; which in turn Phase 4—Economic Pressures has the outcome, in theory at least, there TTO’s need to adopt more flexible models, to satisfy is less IP to transfer out through the TTO. changing ways researchers view the use of IP, and However, managing the IP is not separable changing industry models, ‘Open Innovation.’ from managing the research funding; TTO’s Licensees have the expertise to help researchers use their IP to win research funding. Technology University, Spin-Outs Transfer Researchers The scale of university–industry interacOffice tions not involving the TTO grew in imporResearch tance. What is the TTO to do? Phase 4—Economic pressures This brings us to the present day. In the face of these changes, TTO’s need to adopt 277 les Nouvelles Collaborators Universities need to modify its expectations of the TTO. Will character of TTO’s change...? University Technology Transfer Phase 5—Impacts of Impact Universities in the UK are preparing to submit data to the Research Excellence Framework (the latest version of the government exercise every few years to assess the quality of research in every department in every university). Other countries are watching with interest; some are already planning to adopt a similar approach. For the first time, this exercise involves points being awarded for ‘Impact’. The government defines Impact in some detail; it can broadly be summarised as benefits to society. The Impact case studies are important: 20 percent of the points awarded relate to the strength of impact that a department can demonstrate. And points mean prizes—billions of pounds of government funding will be allocated over many years based on REF scores. The impact issue started with demands from government for evidence of economic return as a direct ‘return on investment’ from government funding of universities. Universities were quick to object that there is far more to it to than economic impact; to which UK government responded that when they say economic impact what they actually mean is economic social and policy impact; peace restored, well not really, why don’t we just call it impact then, and here we are today. Many researchers embrace this, many will fight it well into their pensions. One outcome already has been that universities are becoming far better at telling the stories of how their activities touch and benefit people’s lives around the world. Universities really are a good thing. The challenge for the TTO is that it is now a smaller part of a bigger picture. Researchers are motivated to see their research transferred out from the university to society (as always for some, an entirely alien concept for others); and are learning how to describe the success of this arising from the traditional activities of academic publication, public lecturing, policy advice, consulting, and not only through the commercial route of the TTO. So what are the implications? Implications There are potentially serious implications for a number of people and organisations in this area. For Technology Transfer Offices TTO’s may disappear in universities where the university sees no economic value in the IP arising from its research activities and does not understand the non-commercial benefits of the commercial route; this is a bad thing for everyone involved. As the TTO becomes a smaller part of a bigger picture, decisions may be made to subsume its activities into other university administrative functions, for its resources to be dispersed across the university, and for its activities to become re-directed towards other university activities, for example helping researchers prepare research funding proposals. This is bad because universities (and society) will lose the non-commercial benefits of the commercial route. TTO’s therefore need to continue, constantly, to explain to the university the non-commercial benefits of the commercial route through the TTO. In this way the university will support and appreciate its TTO for the twin reasons of the commercial and non-commercial benefits it brings. For Universities If a university reduces the scale of its TTO activities, then it risks losing the non-commercial benefits of the commercial route. These non-commercial benefits are: demonstrating the university as part of the local community in which it resides; generating stories to show the application of its research to soPhase 5—Impacts Of Impact ciety; promoting entrepreneurship amongst staff and students; attracting new staff who Universities respond to pressure for Impact, become far better at explaining benefits from public investment, are keen on commercial technology transfer. TT Impact diluted. The university will then later complain, and be the subject of criticism and comPolicy plaints, if it misses out on the commercial Technology University, benefits of a blockbuster because it had Industry Transfer Researchers Office insufficient and unskilled TT resource. Universities may wish to consider the Society funding models they have put in place for their TTO’s. As the environment changes, University views TTO as smaller part of a are the funding mechanisms (often for bigger picture. example retention of a share of royalties) December 2013 278 University Technology Transfer recognising and motivating what the university thinks it wants from the TTO? For Government Governments need to beware of the ‘commercialisation effect’ by which pushing hard for the commercial, economic returns has the opposite effect of reducing them. This is because those being pushed often react against the desired activity. This point is well described in What Money Can’t Buy, M. Sandel, 2012 and Social Limits to Growth, F. Hirsch, 1978. If governments wish to push universities to create more economic impact, they are advised to put substantial effort into helping universities understand why the commercial route is good for them, for the non-commercial reasons; rather than relying on the ‘stick’ of financial penalties. In this way universities will continue to promote and support their TTO’s, transferring technologies from universities to business, where business delivers better products and sustainable economic development. For Industry The implications for industry, if universities reduce the effectiveness of their TTO’s, are perhaps the most complex. On the one hand, companies may gain access to more unprotected ideas and technologies which they can use in open competition with their competitors (in this scenario technology is normalised, and business success is down to ‘brand and smarts’). On the other hand, if the IP is not protected, companies may miss out on accessing protected technologies which give the company the comfort to justify the investment to take the early stage research outputs through to market for the benefit of customers, clients, and patients. ‘The World is Getting More Global’ Former U.S. President George Bush coined this phrase and it did not take long for former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair to copy it. The serious point be- 279 les Nouvelles ing that universities and governments in emerging economies are now actively exploring how best to develop their own technology transfer models. This paper references mainly western, developed nation approaches to university technology transfer. Universities and governments in recently emerged and emerging economies have looked at the old ‘heydays’ models and recognised the shortcomings and lack of relevance to their own circumstances. Whilst technology transfer and IP activities are considered as significant indicators in university and national worldwide league tables, universities occupy different places in society around the world. The opportunities for promoting local entrepreneurship may be far more relevant than international patent applications. The new model of combining technology transfer with student entrepreneurship, and with local business interactions is most appealing in many places. Conclusion Everything changes, nothing stays the same. University technology transfer offices have evolved and grown over the last 30 years, as have the universities they serve and the expectations placed on universities. Current pressures on university researchers to secure research funding and promote the benefits derived from the research outputs in the short term, may distract researchers from considering the longer term value (in commercial and non-commercial terms) of protecting and marketing their research outputs with their university’s TTO. The smart university will continue to invest in its technology transfer office to protect its long term interests in realising the potential and returns from its research-based intellectual property. ■ Author’s Note I am grateful to a number of Isis colleagues for their comments and suggestions on this paper. Recent U.S. Decisions Recent U.S. Court Decisions And Developments Affecting Licensing By John Paul and Brian Kacedon Calico Brand, Inc. v. Ameritek Imports, Inc. Failure to Establish that Lost Sales Were a Direct Result of the Infringing Product Precludes Recovery of Lost Profits To recover damages for lost profits, a patent owner must show causation in fact, establishing that, but for the infringement, the patent owner would have made additional profits. The patent owner typically seeks to prove causation in fact using the four Panduit factors: (1) a demand for the patented product, (2) an absence of acceptable noninfringing substitutes, (3) the manufacturing and marketing capability to exploit the demand, and (4) the amount of profit the patent owner would have made. In a recent decision, the Federal Circuit considered whether a patent owner could satisfy the first two Panduit factors with gross sales data for a patented product when the owner failed to establish that lost sales were a direct result of the infringing product. Reversing the district court’s holding that lost profits damages were available, the Federal Circuit found that the gross sales data alone was insufficient in this case to establish consumer demand and a that failure to establish that lost sales were a direct result of the infringing product precluded the recovery of damages for lost profits. In Calico Brand, Inc. v. Ameritek Imports, Inc., Calico sued Acme, claiming willful infringement of its patents directed to safety features in a lighter. The jury found that Acme willfully infringed Calico’s patents and that Calico was entitled to lost profits as compensation for that infringement. But after posttrial motions, the court held that Acme’s infringement was not willful. On appeal, Calico claimed that the district court should not have set aside the jury verdict of willfulness. Acme cross-appealed, arguing that the jury’s award of lost profits should have been overturned. First addressing willful infringement, the Federal Circuit held that the record showed that when Acme learned of its potential liability for infringement, it immediately demanded assurances from its supplier that the products did not infringe. Acme stated that it would, and in fact did, return its inventory of accused products to the supplier. Calico argued, however, that a document showed Acme had sold four lots of product days after learning of Calico’s patents. After reviewing the record, the Federal Circuit concluded that the document lacked detail regarding the nature of the products and that the jury had not been presented the document. Without evidence that the jury had relied on the document and that the document could in fact prove sales of infringing products, the court did not give it weight. Because Acme’s actions showed that it had not proceeded with infringement after notice of the patents, the Federal Circuit affirmed the district court’s hold■ John C. Paul, ing that the infringement Finnegan, Henderson, Farabow, was not willful. Garrett & Dunner, LLP, Regarding lost profAttorney, its, the Federal Circuit Washington, D.C., USA focused its analysis on E-mail: [email protected] two Panduit factors: (1) a demand for the pat■ D. Brian Kacedon, ented product, and (2) Finnegan, Henderson, Farabow, an absence of acceptable Garrett & Dunner, LLP, noninfringing substitutes. Partner, As to the first factor, the Washington, D.C., USA Federal Circuit held that, in this case, gross sales E-mail: brian.kacedon@ data alone could not esfinnegan.com tablish consumer demand based on the patented invention. Calico had not elicited any testimony regarding the commercial value of the patented features or distinguishing between the value of the patented and unpatented features. Moreover, the evidence indicated that the price of the accused products drove customer demand, not the patented safety features. For the second factor—an absence of acceptable noninfringing substitutes—the Federal Circuit held that Calico failed to demonstrate a reasonable probability that, in the absence of the infringing product, Acme or its customers would have purchased Calico’s products rather than one of the many competitors’ noninfringing alternatives. Calico’s failure to establish that its lost sales were a direct result of Acme’s infringing sales rather than other noninfringing sales precluded the recovery of lost profits. Reversing the district court’s conclusion that, under a market-share theory, Calico would have captured profits “but for” Acme’s infringement, the Federal Circuit vacated the award of lost profits and remanded for entry of December 2013 280 Recent U.S. Decisions judgment reflecting the jury’s award of damages in the form of a reasonable royalty. Strategy and Conclusion This case illustrates potential pitfalls in satisfying the first two Panduit factors. For the first factor— demand for the patented product—courts may look for testimony distinguishing between the value of the patented and unpatented features. Additionally, the second factor—an absence of acceptable noninfringing substitutes—may be difficult to satisfy in a diverse market. Patent holders need to be able to establish a reasonable probability that, in the absence of the infringing product, customers would have purchased the patented product rather than the noninfringing alternatives. Hamilton Beach and Sunbeam Offers or Agreements with Suppliers to Manufacture Patented Products Before Applying for Patent Protection Can Be an Offer for Sale that Bars Patentability Hamilton Beach and Sunbeam sell competing slow cookers—large electric pots for cooking food for a long duration. Hamilton Beach owns a patent for a slow cooker, which covers a product it sells as the “Stay or Go” cooker. Hamilton Beach’s first patent application for the Stay or Go was filed on March 1, 2006. In response to Hamilton Beach’s apparent success in the market with the Stay or Go, Sunbeam developed a competing slow cooker, called the “Cook & Carry.” Instead of mounting sealing clips on the body of the slow cooker, as required by the claims in Hamilton Beach’s patent, Sunbeam’s Cook & Carry included sealing clips mounted on the lid of the slow cooker. In response to Sunbeam’s introduction of the Cook & Carry, on June 4, 2010, Hamilton Beach filed another patent application based on its first application, now claiming a slow cooker with sealing clips mounted on the lid. The USPTO granted a patent on Hamilton Beach’s new application, and Hamilton Beach sued Sunbeam, alleging infringement by the Cook & Carry. In district court, Sunbeam moved for summary judgment, arguing that Hamilton Beach offered its Stay or Go slow cooker for sale more than one year before March 1, 2006, thereby rendering the claims in Hamilton Beach’s later-issued patent invalid. The district court granted Sunbeam’s motion, finding that Hamilton Beach made invalidating commercial offers to sell the Stay or Go more than one year before March 1, 2006. Decision On appeal, the Federal Circuit explained the “on281 les Nouvelles sale bar” underlying the district court’s decision that a commercial offer for sale invalidated Hamilton Beach’s patent. Under Supreme Court precedent, the on-sale bar applies when, before the critical date (i.e., one year before the date of application for patent in the U.S.), the claimed invention was the subject of a commercial offer for sale and was ready for patenting. Any attempt to sell is sufficient for a “commercial offer for sale” as long as it is sufficiently definite that another party could make a binding contract by simple acceptance. Additionally, an invention is “ready for patenting” when, before the critical date, the invention is reduced to practice, depicted in drawings, or described in writings that enable a person of ordinary skill in the art to practice the invention. Because the filing date of Hamilton Beach’s first patent application for the Stay or Go slow cooker was March 1, 2006, the critical date in this dispute was one year earlier, or March 1, 2005. Sunbeam argued that Hamilton Beach’s foreign supplier offered to sell the Stay or Go before that critical date. Specifically, Hamilton Beach issued a purchase order for nearly 2,000 Stay or Go slow cookers to its foreign supplier on February 8, 2005. Hamilton Beach listed its Tennessee facility as the shipping address for the merchandise and its Virginia office as the billing address. The supplier confirmed receipt of the purchase order on February 25, 2005, and responded that it would begin manufacturing the slow cookers once it received Hamilton Beach’s release. As a result of these facts, the Federal Circuit agreed with the district court’s conclusion that there was a commercial offer for sale. At the outset, the Federal Circuit noted that there is no “supplier exception” to the on-sale bar. Thus, the Court found it was of no moment that the alleged offer for sale was made by Hamilton Beach’s supplier. Next, the Court noted that after Hamilton Beach sent the purchase order to its foreign supplier on February 8, 2005, the supplier responded on February 25, 2005, that it had received and was ready to fulfill the order. This response from the supplier was significant, the Federal Circuit explained, not because it formed a binding contract, but rather because it was an offer to sell Stay or Go slow cookers that could form a binding contract upon Hamilton Beach’s “release.” This was sufficient to satisfy the Supreme Court’s first prong requiring a commercial offer for sale, according to the Federal Circuit. Next considering the “ready for patenting” prong of the Supreme Court’s test, the Federal Circuit agreed with the district court that the Stay or Go slow cooker Recent U.S. Decisions was ready for patenting before the critical date. In reaching its decision, the district court considered evidence of Hamilton Beach’s meetings with retail customers before the critical date. At these meetings, Hamilton Beach presented formal drawings showing the Stay or Go with all of the elements claimed in both of Hamilton Beach’s patents. Moreover, Hamilton Beach conceded that, by February 2005, it had at least one product sample and a successful working prototype of the Stay or Go that operated as claimed in its later patent. The Federal Circuit stated that even if some of the prototypes did not work quite as intended, fine-tuning an invention after the critical date does not mean that the invention was not “ready for patenting.” Because Hamilton Beach’s invention claimed in its patent was both the subject of a commercial offer for sale and ready for patenting before the critical date of March 1, 2005, the Federal Circuit affirmed the district court’s decision that the asserted claims were invalid. In a dissenting opinion, Judge Reyna argued that the majority failed to decide whether the offer for sale was commercial in nature or for purely experimental purposes, thereby extending the no “supplier exception” rule to even experimental uses. According to Judge Reyna, there was no “commercial” offer for sale here because at the time of the purchase order, the lid on Hamilton Beach’s slow cooker could not prevent leakage of foodstuffs from the interior of the container. Therefore, the dissent concluded, Hamilton Beach was entitled to perfect its slow cooker under the experimental-use exception to the on-sale bar. Strategy and Conclusion This case demonstrates the importance of filing patent applications covering commercial embodiments of an invention as early as possible. When timing is crucial, applicants might consider filing provisional applications, which may offer an inexpensive and useful tool to obtain the earliest possible filing date. This case also shows the need for potential patentees to be cautious when dealing with suppliers, including overseas suppliers, as those dealings may trigger the on-sale bar. Mr. Kimble and Marvel Royalty Payments for Hybrid Patent and Technology Rights Should Decrease After The Patents Expire Or Be Shown Not To Be Subject To Patent Leverage Inventor Stephen Kimble invented a Spider-Man toy that allowed a user to “role play” as Spider-Man by mimicking Spider-Man’s web-shooting abilities with foam string. Mr. Kimble got a patent on this toy, which expired in May 2010. In late 1990, Mr. Kimble met with the president of Marvel’s predecessor to discuss his idea, which was covered by the then-pending application for what would become Mr. Kimble’s patent. According to Mr. Kimble, Marvel agreed that it would pay him if it used any of his ideas. Later, Marvel told Mr. Kimble that it was not interested in his ideas. Nevertheless, Marvel then started making a toy similar Mr. Kimble’s idea, which it called the “Web Blaster.” In 1997, Mr. Kimble sued Marvel for patent infringement and breach of contract, claiming that Marvel had used his ideas to develop the Web Blaster without paying him. The court granted Marvel’s motion for summary judgment of noninfringement on the patent claim, but the case went to trial on the contract claim. The jury sided with Mr. Kimble, and the court awarded him 3.5 percent of past, present, and future Web Blaster net sales. Kimble appealed on the patent-infringement claim, and Marvel appealed on the contract claim. In 2001, while the appeals were still pending, the parties agreed to settle the case. Marvel agreed to buy the patent from Mr. Kimble. The parties also agreed to a release, under which Mr. Kimble released Marvel except for Marvel’s obligations under the settlement agreement itself, and except for those obligations under the alleged verbal agreement that was the subject of the action. The settlement agreement had no expiration date and did not include any specific time limit on Marvel’s obligation to pay 3 percent of net product sales. The parties coexisted for several years without any significant disagreement. Web Blaster sales were significant and Marvel paid over $6 million in royalties to Mr. Kimble. Then, in 2006, disagreements arose between Marvel and Mr. Kimble over the royalties, including the calculation of the royalty payments for subsequent iterations of the Web Blaster that included additional functions or that were packaged with other role-play toys. Mr. Kimble sued again, and Marvel counterclaimed, seeking a declaration that it was no longer obligated to pay Kimble under the settlement agreement based on the sales of products after the expiration of Mr. Kimble’s patent. The district court referred the summary-judgment motions to a magistrate judge, who found that under Brulotte, Mr. Kimble could not recover royalties under the settlement agreement beyond the expiration date of the patent. The magistrate judge reasoned that the settlement agreement transferred patent rights and that it was December 2013 282 Recent U.S. Decisions less clear that it transferred any nonpatent rights. He observed that the release clause suggested that Mr. Kimble reserved the nonpatent rights from the verbal agreement and did not transfer them to Marvel. Alternatively, he found that Brulotte applied because the settlement agreement was a “hybrid” agreement transferring inseparable patent and nonpatent rights, and because the patent rights were used as leverage to negotiate the agreement. Over Mr. Kimble’s objection, the district court adopted the magistrate’s recommendation. Specifically, the district court found that the agreement did not distinguish between royalties for patent and nonpatent rights and therefore the agreement was a “hybrid” and that the royalties had to end when the patent expired. The parties appealed. Decision On appeal, the Ninth Circuit began its analysis by reviewing Brulotte. In Brulotte, the Supreme Court held that a patentee’s use of a royalty agreement projecting beyond the expiration date of the patent is unlawful per se, explaining that Congress had granted inventors the exclusive rights to their discoveries for a limited time, after which the rights become public property. According to the Court, any attempt to reserve or continue the patent monopoly after expiration runs counter to the policy and purpose of the patent laws, regardless of what legal device is employed. But in a later decision, Aronson, the Supreme Court found that patent law did not preclude the enforcement of an agreement to provide royalty payments indefinitely where no patent had issued. In Aronson, a company had agreed to pay a 5 percent royalty to an inventor for the exclusive right to sell her invention, but if the patent application was not allowed within five years, the company would pay 2.5 percent to the inventor as long as it continued to sell the invention. A patent never issued on the application, and the company ultimately sued, seeking a declaration that the contract for the 2.5 percent royalty was preempted by patent law. The Court found that the agreement was not inconsistent with patent-law principles because it did not withdraw any idea from the public domain. The Court noted that the inventor had disclosed the design to the party in confidence and, had the party tried to exploit the design in breach of that confidence, it would have risked legal liability. The Court also accepted that if the inventor had obtained the patent, she would have received a 5 percent royalty only on sales during the life of the patent. The distinction between the contracts in Brulotte and Aronson rested, according to the Supreme Court, 283 les Nouvelles on the fact that the extended-royalty term in Aronson was not negotiated with the leverage of a patent but rested on the contingency that no patent would issue within five years. Because of these decisions, according to the Ninth Circuit in Marvel, several other circuits have applied the Brulotte rule to preclude payment of royalties beyond the expiration date of patents under so-called hybrid agreements encompassing inseparable patent and nonpatent rights. The Ninth Circuit phrased the rule as “a license for inseparable patent and nonpatent rights involving royalty payments that extends beyond a patent term is unenforceable for the post-expiration period unless the agreement provides a discount for the nonpatent rights from the patentprotected rate.” Applying this rule to the situation between Mr. Kimble and Marvel, the Ninth Circuit upheld the district court’s finding that the settlement agreement was a hybrid and that the royalties had to end when the patent expired. Specifically, the court noted that the agreement plainly involved one royalty rate for both patent and nonpatent rights, with no discount or other clear indication that the Web Blaster royalties were not subject to patent leverage. At the time the parties negotiated the agreement, the patentinfringement claim was not definitively resolved. The district court had found that the Web Blaster did not infringe the patent, but Mr. Kimble was appealing that decision. Because the infringement claim remained disputed, the parties could resolve their dispute only by including Web Blaster sales in a patent license. In addition, the settlement agreement did not include a discounted rate for the nonpatent rights. As the court explained, the point of requiring a discount from the patent-protected rate is that it shows that the royalty at issue was not subject to patent leverage. The court found that even though a discounted rate may not be necessary to avoid Brulotte in every case, in the absence of a discounted rate, some other clear indication must show that the royalty was in no way subject to patent leverage. The Ninth Circuit noted that it did not necessarily agree with the conclusion but that it was bound to follow Supreme Court precedent and that it was also guided by the “particularly strong national uniformity concerns” present in patent cases. Strategy and Conclusion This case demonstrates the value of drafting settlement agreements that separate the compensation for patent rights and nonpatent rights. To the extent nonpatent rights are involved, it is useful to be able to show that those rights are not subject to patent Recent U.S. Decisions leverage if the patentee intends to maintain rights to compensation after the patents expire. Beriont v. GTE Labs, Inc. A Defense to Patent Infringement under the Shop-Rights Doctrine Should Be Supported by Factual Findings on the Conception of the Invention and the Scope of the Allegedly Infringing Use The shop-rights doctrine is a defense to patent infringement that may be raised by an employer when an employee sues an employer based on a patented invention that was created using the employer’s resources. While the contours of the doctrine are not clearly defined, it generally protects only an employer’s internal uses rather than sales to an unrelated third-party. In Beriont v. GTE Labs, Inc., the Federal Circuit reviewed the trial court’s ruling that GTE could rely on shop rights to absolve it of any infringement claims occurring before GTE acquired ownership of the relevant patent. The court also reviewed the trial court’s finding that a settlement agreement reached between the parties absolved GTE of liability for infringement occurring after the date of the settlement. Noting that the district court failed to make many relevant factual and legal findings, the Federal Circuit reversed the district court’s decision regarding GTE’s shop-right defense and remanded for factual findings relating to infringement during this time. Background GTE hired Walter Beriont as an engineer and, during his employment, he conceived of an invention relating to television-network power distribution. He disclosed this invention to GTE and a coworker, Alfred Bellows. Mr. Beriont and Mr. Bellows jointly filed a patent application through GTE’s counsel. The patent that issued was assigned on its face to GTE and listed Mr. Beriont and Mr. Bellows as coinventors. Following the issuance of the patent, Mr. Beriont questioned the assignment and joint inventorship, so he filed suit in the federal district court seeking a declaration that he was the sole inventor, removal of Mr. Bellows as a coinventor, removal of GTE as an assignee, and a judgment of patent infringement against GTE. Separate from these federal-court claims, the parties were also litigating some state-court claims related to issues in the federal-court claims. As a result, the district court stayed the case pending the state-court actions. The state-court claims were ultimately dismissed because of an oral settlement agreement the parties presented to the state court. With the state-court claims dismissed, the federal case resumed. During a pretrial conference in the federal case, the parties agreed on certain terms of the oral settlement agreement from the state-court claims. One of those agreed-upon terms established that the parties jointly owned the patent. Because of this, the district court entered final judgment that the patent is jointly owned by Mr. Beriont and GTE. This joint ownership, according to the district court, absolved GTE of liability for infringement occurring after the agreement, and the shop-rights doctrine absolved GTE of liability for infringement occurring before the agreement. Mr. Beriont appealed the district court’s decision, claiming, among other things, that GTE was liable as an infringer for activities occurring before the settlement agreement because the joint-ownership agreement was not retroactive and the shop-rights doctrine did not protect GTE for its acts during that time. The Beriont Decision While agreeing with the district court that GTE was not liable for infringement occurring after the settlement agreement was reached, the Federal Circuit remanded the case back to the district court to further develop the record on infringement occurring before the settlement agreement was reached. The Federal Circuit found the district court’s factual record inadequate to support the shop-rights doctrine and directed the district court to address Mr. Beriont’s inventorship claim. First, the Federal Circuit rejected Mr. Beriont’s argument that he did not contemplate full joint ownership (i.e., a 50/50 split) when negotiating the settlement agreement. Citing the default rule of joint ownership—that in the absence of an agreement to the contrary, joint owners of a patent may use the patent without the other owners’ consent—the Federal Circuit found nothing in the agreement departing from the rule. Instead, because he conceded that in the settlement agreement GTE is a joint owner, Mr. Beriont would have, at most, a state-law contract claim that the profits were to be shared disproportionately, according to the court. Regarding the infringement occurring before the settlement agreement was reached, the Federal Circuit discussed the shop-rights doctrine—a defense to patent infringement based on a judicially created theory of an implied license. It allows an employer to practice an invention internally when the invention belongs to an employee who created it with the employer’s resources. Mr. Beriont alleged that GTE manufactured and sold the invention, an activity the Federal Circuit recognized as outside the scope of the doctrine. Furthermore, the district court received no December 2013 284 Recent U.S. Decisions briefing on the shop-rights doctrine and did not make the factual findings necessary to place GTE’s actions within the boundaries of the doctrine. As a result, the court concluded that remand to the district court was necessary to develop the record. The Federal Circuit also mentioned alternative grounds that might support a finding that GTE was not liable for infringement prior to the agreement. First, the agreement, which is governed by state law, may have had retroactive effect. Second, even if not retroactive, GTE may have benefited from a separate assignment agreement from Mr. Beriont that predated the conception of the invention. Apparently, the parties did not address this agreement in either stage of the case in the federal courts, although it was important to the state-court decision. Finally, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has an executed assignment recorded and entered in 2002, apparently as a result of a judgment regarding assignment, that the parties also did not address. In dissent, Judge Lourie explained that he would not remand the case to further consider whether GTE was liable for infringement occurring before the settlement agreement was reached. In his view, the record contained sufficient evidence—specifically the assignment agreements—to find that GTE had ownership rights to the patent and was therefore free to practice the patent. Strategy and Conclusion In Beriont, the Federal Circuit required a more complete record of the underlying facts before allowing a party to rely on shop rights as a defense to infringement. Although the contours of the shop-rights doctrine may remain uncertain, it can be helpful for parties facing issues relating to ownership and assignment in the employer–employee context to consider potential implications of the shop-rights doctrine and establish a record of the facts surrounding the employment, conception of the invention, and the scope of the defendant’s use of the invention. Innovatio IP Ventures, LLC Patent Litigation Court Finds Patent Claims Essential to Wi-Fi Standard Because They Cover Technology Required by the Standard and There Are No Commercially or Technically Feasible Noninfringing Alternatives Courts have increasingly found themselves facing issues related to patents essential to standards and the associated obligations imposed by standardssetting organizations. One such standards-setting organization is the IEEE, which established the 802.11 standard for wireless networks. Devices that 285 les Nouvelles comply with the 802.11 standard can easily communicate with each other in any WLAN. To comply, devices must use the technology described in the standard. This requirement can provide significant benefits to companies owning patents covering the standards-essential technology. To curb potential market manipulation, the IEEE requires that owners of standards-essential patents offer licenses to those patents on reasonable and nondiscriminatory terms (often referred to as “RAND”). In re Innovatio IP Ventures, LLC Patent Litigation the court held that a patent claim was essential to the 802.11 standard if (1) there is no commercially or technically feasible way to avoid infringing the claim and (2) the patent claim describes technology explicitly required by the standard. Innovatio had purchased 23 patents for wireless technology. As the 802.11 standard was finalized, the previous owners of Innovatio’s patents sent letters to the IEEE, agreeing to license any standards-essential technology covered by their patents on RAND terms. Anticipating a patent-infringement suit, a group of manufacturers of 802.11-compliant devices filed a declaratory-judgment action against Innovatio, seeking a declaration of noninfringement and invalidity. Innovatio countersued, alleging infringement. At the outset, the parties and the district court agreed to first determine the potential damages available to Innovatio. The manufacturers argued that Innovatio’s patents contain claims essential to the 802.11 standard and, therefore, that Innovatio must honor the previous patent owners’ commitments to license those patents on RAND terms. Further, the manufacturers argued, this RAND obligation necessarily limited Innovatio’s potential recovery to no more than a RAND royalty. The Innovatio Decision The district court relied on the IEEE Bylaws and Federal Circuit law to resolve the dispute. Noting the IEEE Bylaws, the district court reiterated that a patentee is obligated to license only individual standards-essential claims, not entire patents, on RAND terms. Analogizing a RAND obligation to a license (a contractual commitment limiting the liability of an infringer), the district court further stated that alleged infringers bear the burden of showing that a RAND obligation exists—namely that a claim is standards-essential. According to the court, “the alternative would be to assume in patent litigation that every potentially standardessential claim is subject to RAND until the patent owner demonstrates otherwise, a rule that would Recent U.S. Decisions be overly burdensome for patent owners.” Thus, this case turned on whether the disputed claims were essential to the 802.11 standard. The parties agreed that the IEEE Bylaws dictate the meaning of an “essential patent claim.” According to the Bylaws, an essential patent claim includes any claim “the use of which was necessary to create compliant implementation,” so long as there is “no commercially and technically feasible non-infringing alternative.” The Bylaws include an exception: an essential patent claim does not include any claim “essential only for Enabling Technology.” Enabling Technology is any technology necessary for, but not explicitly required by, the standard. Construing the Bylaws to avoid rendering any provision superfluous, the district court concluded: If a patent claim recites only technology that is necessary to implement the standard, but that is not explicitly required by or expressly set forth in the standard, then the claim is not standardessential, even though it is “necessary” within the meaning of the first sentence. By negative implication, however, a claim directed to both Enabling Technology and to explicit steps of the standard is essential. The manufacturers argued that, in addition to the court’s definition, “a compliant implementation” requires a compliant device (such as a laptop, an access point, or a barcode reader) and not just a standardized feature. Accordingly, they suggested that a claim is standards-essential if any compliant device infringes the patent claim. The district court disagreed, noting “one does not usually speak of ‘implementing’ a device… . Instead one ‘implements’ a standardized feature.” Moreover, the Bylaws specifically refer to “a compliant implementation of either mandatory or optional portions.” Determining Whether Claims Are Essential to a Standard Having defined the contours of a standards-essential claim, the court analyzed different groups of asserted claims to determine whether each of these groups was standards-essential. Many of the claims the court examined recited features or functions necessary to implement an optional portion or an optional mode of the standard. The use of those functions or features defined in the standard would infringe the claims and, as a result, the court found those claims standards-essential. For some of the other claims, Innovatio had proposed noninfringing alternatives, which were intended to show that the claims are non-standards- essential because the standard can be implemented without infringing the claims. But the court found that Innovatio’s proposed noninfringing alternatives either still infringed or were not technically or commercially feasible. For example, one of Innovatio’s proposed noninfringing alternatives would slow communication and cause data to be lost, which made that proposed noninfringing alternative not technically feasible. As a result, the court found these claims standards-essential. For other claims, the court found that although the claimed technology was not technically part of the standard, the industry had coalesced around using the claimed technology, noting that Innovatio was not able to identify any devices on the market lacking the claimed technology. Thus, there was no commercially feasible alternative to using the claimed technology to implement the standard, which led the court to find that those claims too were standards-essential. The court also looked at some dependent claims that added a single element to other standardsessential independent claims. But this additional element—such as a keyboard or a processor—the court noted, was too basic. The court rejected Innovatio’s argument that the dependent claims were non-standards-essential because, as the court explained, allowing a dependent claim that adds a basic additional element to be non-standardsessential would render the RAND obligation meaningless. In other words, a company could agree to license the standards-essential independent claim but then avoid that obligation by simply adding a dependent claim that adds a basic additional element (such as a keyboard). In discussing this issue, the court also addressed “Enabling Technology” as defined by the IEEE. Innovatio argued that the additional element in the dependent claim did not recite Enabling Technology because it was not necessary to make or use something that complies with the standard. The court likewise rejected this argument, explaining that it would permit companies to avoid RAND obligations by claiming a subset of Enabling Technology (for example, a keyboard rather than a data-input device) and then arguing that the unclaimed subset of Enabling Technology provided a noninfringing alternative. For these reasons, the court found that the dependent claims that added basic limitations to standardsessential claims were likewise standards-essential. In short, then, the court found all of Innovatio’s claims to be standards-essential, for the various reasons listed above. Because the court determined that December 2013 286 Recent U.S. Decisions the claims are standards-essential, it subjected those claims to Innovatio’s RAND obligations. Strategy and Conclusion The bylaws and other rules of a standard setting organization form a starting point to determine whether patents relating to standardized technology carry potential obligations to license the patents under reasonable and non-discriminatory conditions. Depending on the particular standards-setting organization, standards-essential claims could potentially include claims that read on optional features of the standard, dependent claims that add basic elements to standards-essential claims, and claims that are not necessarily required by the standard but that the industry has nevertheless coalesced around. Helferich Patent Licensing, LLC v. New York Times Co. District Court Holds that a License for Only Certain Claims of a Patent May Nonetheless Result in Exhaustion of All the Claims of the Patent Under the doctrine of patent exhaustion, a patent holder’s ability to control the further use and resale of a patented product typically ends after the first authorized sale of that product. Exhaustion can occur whether the patented product is sold by the patent owner or by someone authorized by the patent owner, such as licensee. Often, patent owners attempt to craft their licenses in a manner intended to limit the scope of patent exhaustion that occurs when their licensees sell products under the license. In Helferich Patent Licensing, LLC v. New York Times Co., a district court in the Northern District of Illinois addressed one such situation where a patent owner attempted to license only certain claims of its patents, while preserving others as unlicensed and thus, nonexhausted. After discussing the policy rationale underlying the doctrine of patent exhaustion, the court determined that allowing such a licensing agreement would improperly allow multiple royalties from the same patents for a single sale and effectively vitiate the patent-exhaustion doctrine. Background Helferich Patent Licensing, LLC (“HPL”) owns a large portfolio of patents that relate to mobile communication devices and methods of providing content to those devices. At a high level, the claims relate to sending to a device an identifier of content, which the device may use to request delivery of the content when desired. Helferich has commonly asserted the claims against SMS messages (mobile-phone text 287 les Nouvelles messages) that contain hyperlinks to Web content. As Helferich has widely publicized, it has licensed its patents to the entire industry of cell-phone manufacturers. The licenses include a provision that HPL will not assert any claim against a third party; but some agreements ostensibly withhold certain claims from this clause. HPL also sought to license its patents to content providers. While some of them took a license, others (including the defendants in this case) declined. As a result, HPL filed suit, alleging that the content providers who did not take a license infringe HPL’s patents. The parties filed cross motions for summary judgment on the issue of patent exhaustion. The Helferich Decision Ruling on the motions for summary judgment, the court granted the defendants’ motion and dismissed HPL’s claims of patent infringement. Applying Quanta Computer v. LG Electronics, the court held that a license agreement may not be used to avoid patent exhaustion by licensing only certain claims of a patent. The court began with a discussion of the rule established in Quanta, concluding that “[t]he focus of Quanta is that the sale of the product results in the exhaustion of the patent in its entirety, rather than the exhaustion of certain claims.” HPL contended that its patents were distinguishable from those in Quanta, because they had “handset” (i.e., cell phone) claims, which were distinct from the patents’ “content” claims. It argued that the licenses granted to the cell-phone manufacturers included only the handset claims, whereas the defendants’ activities infringed the nonlicensed content claims. In opposition, the defendants argued that a patent owner cannot license only a portion of a patent in order to collect multiple royalties on the same patent for one use or sale. They supported this view by noting that a patent covers only the totality of the elements in the claim. The court found no genuine issue of material fact regarding the fact that HPL licensed its patents to the entire cell-phone industry. By HPL’s own admission, every manufacturer of cell phones had a license to practice, without limitation, any and all inventions in the licensed patents. As a result, every cell phone has been licensed to practice the inventions in HPL’s patents. The court concluded that because every cell phone had been licensed, none could infringe those patents. Next, the court turned to the question of whether or not the cell phones sufficiently embodied the patents-in-suit because, to trigger patent exhaustion, Recent U.S. Decisions the item sold needs only to sufficiently embody the patent rather than completely practice the patent by itself. In this case, the cell phones practiced the claims of the patent when used as designed, so the court found no genuine issue of material fact that the cell phones sufficiently embodied the patents-in-suit. Finally, the court considered HPL’s attempts to carve out rights from the handset licenses. The license agreements sought to reserve causes of action against third parties for the “withheld claims.” The court, however, rejected this reservation and held that such attempts to avoid patent exhaustion must fail in light of Quanta. Under Quanta, the court pointed out, “[t]he right of Defendants and other third parties here to practice HPL’s patents is based on exhaustion, not on an implied license from a covenant in other agreements.” The court determined that HPL’s attempt to reserve causes of action on some claims would restrict postsale activities of third parties, therefore violating the principles underlying patent exhaustion. Thus, the court concluded that HPL’s carve-out provision could not prevent exhaustion. The district court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment and held that HPL exhausted its patent rights when it licensed the portfolio to the cellular-handset manufacturers. Accordingly, it dismissed HPL’s claims of patent infringement against the defendant content providers. Strategy and Conclusion While this decision is likely to be appealed, licensors should be aware that some courts may view license agreements that seek to license only some claims of a patent as exhausting rights in the entire patent. In its decision, the Helferich court stated that a patent owner wishing to avoid this result would need to obtain separate patents for those claims it wishes to withhold from the license. This suggests that an alternative strategy for licensing a broad portfolio might start with patent prosecution, clearly separating families of patents that could then be separately licensed to different industries. ■ The authors acknowledge with appreciation the assistance of Doug Meier and Jason Melvin. This article is for informational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of LES or Finnegan. December 2013 288 Notes Notes: les Nouvelles LES International Officers President President-Elect Past-President Vice-President ® Vice-President Vice-President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Counsel Counsel Yvonne Chua Arnaud Michel Kevin Nachtrab Mark Horsburgh Kenneth McKay Fiona Nicolson Christian Osterrieth François Painchaud Jim Sobieraj Michael Lechter Audrey Yap les Nouvelles Editorial Review Board Chair: Rodney DeBoos, Melbourne, Australia Lex van Wijk, Amersfoort, Netherlands Heinz Goddar, Munich, Germany Norm Jacobs, Boca Raton, Florida, U.S.A. Sun-Ryung Kim, Seoul, Korea Masato Kobayashi, Tokyo, Japan Kenneth D. McKay, Toronto, Canada Thomas Bereuter, Vienna, Austria Eduardo C.A. de Mello e Souza, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Larry Plonsker, Editor 10580 Northgreen Dr., Wellington, FL 33449 Tel: +1-561-432-8814 E-mail: [email protected] Carla J. Blackman, Design Interface Inc. Design & Production les Nouvelles Volume XLVIII Number 4 (ISSN 0270-174X) les Nouvelles is published quarterly by the Licensing Executives Society International (LESI). LESI is an association of 32 National and Regional Societies, each composed of individual members who are engaged in the profession of licensing and other aspects of transferring or profiting from intellectual property. Subscription to the journal is included in the membership dues paid by all members. Subscription for the print publication is available to nonmembers for US$200/year. Please contact the Editor for further details. The articles published in les Nouvelles reflect the views of the authors and not of the Society as an association or its officers. Material printed in the journal is covered by copyright. No parts of this publication may be reproduced, displayed or transmitted in any form, without prior permission from the Editor or Board of LESI. A peer review and evaluation system is used to maintain the scholarly nature of the material published in this journal. All articles submitted for publication are reviewed and evaluated by members of the Editorial Review Board (ERB). The ERB members are chosen for their expertise in the fields of licensing and intellectual property. All evaluations are reviewed in a double-blind fashion to remove any bias in the results. The final decision on publication rests with the editor. A guideline for authors can be found on our Web site at the following address: www.lesi.org/lesnouvelles/advertise. asp#submission Copyright ©2013 Licensing Executives Society International. DEADLINES FOR les Nouvelles: Copy for publication in les Nouvelles should be received by the Editor-in-Chief as far as possible in advance of the final deadlines, January 1, April 1, July 1 and October 1. Articles for the white pages are reviewed by the LES Editorial Review Board, and they are published as soon as possible after acceptance. All materials are to be submitted electronically in either MS Word or Text Only format. Delegates Germany Andean Community Jose Luis Barzallo Ingo Bruckner Esteban Riofrio Heinz Goddar Arab Countries Peter Hess Mohammed Al-Ansari Gunter Isenbruck Nabil Salame Jochen Schäfer Argentina Guido von Scheffer Gustavo Giay Hungary Fernando Noetinger Michael Lantos Australia & New Zealand Katalin Szamosi Albert Ferraloro India Mark Horsburgh Rahul Verdak Philip Heuzenroeder Vishwanathan Sheshan Tim Jones Israel Austria Dalit Sagiv Thomas Bereuter Neil Wilkof Rainer Kraft Benelux Italy Achim Krebs Giovanni Grippiotti Jean Christophe Troussel Luigi Saglietti Lex van Wijk Mario Traverso Brazil Japan Cândida Ribeiro Caffé Katsumi Harashima Juliana Viegas Ichiro Nakatomi Britain & Ireland Makoto Ogino Hayley French Junko Sugimura Fiona Nicolson Yorikatsu Hohokabe Jennifer Pierce Korea Mark Wilson Wendy (Hyosun) Choi Chile Felipe Claro Jeong-Joong (JJ) Kim Fernando Garcia Malaysia China Pauline Khor Anita Leung Law Yoo Foo Christopher Shaowei Mexico Yibin Feng Abraham Alegria Chinese Taipei Gloria Isla Paul Hsu Philippines Richard Thurston Leslie Anne Cruz Czech Republic Ferdinand Negre Vojtech Chloupek Poland Denisa Svecova Marek Lazewski France Alicja Rogozinska Alfred Chaouat Andre-Pascal Chauvin Russia Emmanuel Gougé Margarita Divina Arnaud Michel Natalia Karpova Scandinavia Morten Balle Jonas Gulliksson Leif Nielson Singapore Yu Sarn Chiew Audrey Yap South Africa Zelda Snyman Pieter Venter Spain & Portugal Jose Migual Lissen Antonio Tavira Switzerland Regula Altmann Raymond Reuteler Martin Schneider Turkey Omer Hiziroglu Murat Idal USA & Canada Ned Barlas Allen Baum Pam Cox Ted Cross Mike Dansky Tom Filarski Ron Grudziecki Bob Gruetzmacher Shawn Jacka M Rashid Khan Gary Keller Michael Lasinski Russell Levine Keith Lutsch Simmone Misra Tanya Moore Dwight Olson John Paul Janet Pioli Paul Roberts Art Rose Tony Venturino Jeff Whittle Society Officers Chapter Andean Community Arab Countries Argentina Australia & New Zealand Austria Benelux Brazil Britain & Ireland Chile China-Hong Kong China Chinese Taipei Czech Republic France Germany Hungary India Israel Italy Japan Korea Malaysia Mexico Philippines Poland Russia Scandinavia Singapore South Africa Spain & Portugal Switzerland Turkey USA & Canada President Estaban RIOFRIO Talal ABU-GHAZALEH Gustavo P. GIAY Tim JONES Alexander Cizek Jean-Christophe TROUSSEL Rodolfo MARTINEZ Y PELL Jennifer PIERCE Rodrigo LEON Anita LEUNG Yu PING Paul HSU Milos HARABA Emmanuel GOUGÉ Frank L. ZACHARIAS Michael LANTOS Raj HIRWANI Hananel KVATINSKY Roberto DINI Katsumi HARASHIMA Jeong-Joong KIM Brian LAW Hector CHAGOYA Leslie CRUZ Alicja ROGOZINSKA Sergey DOROFEEV Kaisa FAHLLUND Sheena JACOB Zelda SNYMAN Jose Luis de MIGUEL Regula ALTMAN-JOHL Omer Hiziroglu Russell LEVINE Secretary Carolina VENEGAS GAVIRIA Nabil Salamé Veronica CANESE Jeff BERGMAN Sabine FEHRINGER Achim KREBS Theresa G. Curi ABRANCHES John ROE Juan Cristóbal GUMUCIO Rosita LI Yibin FENG David SU Denisa SVECOVA Marc BETHENOD Peter K. HESS Katalin DERZSI Sunil KRISHNA Dalit SAGIV Gian Antonio PANCOT Kiyotaka WATANABE Hyoseon CHOI Michelle LOI CHOI JOKE Carlos Trujillo May CANIBA-LLONA Jakub MRDZOWSKI Velery MEDVEDEV Per ERICSSON Suresh SACHI Darren MARGO Don Jose Miguel LISSÉN Stefan KOHLER Murat IDAL Paul ROBERTS December 2013 LES International Licensing And Intellectual Property Organizations Meetings For more information on LESI Meetings, go to www.lesi.org 2014 January 3 LES Foundation International Business Plan Competition Business Plan Submission Deadline January 19–21 LES Global Technology Impact Forum (GTIF) Geneva, Switzerland February 10–11 LES (USA & Canada) IP100 Executive Forum Arizona Biltmore Phoenix, Arizona USA March 20–22 LES ANZ 2014 Conference Perth, Australia March 25–27 LES (USA & Canada) Mid-Year Meeting New York, New York USA May 16–18 LESI Management & Delegates’ Meeting (IMDM) Moscow, Russia May 18–21 LESI Annual Conference Moscow, Russia October 5–8 LES (USA & Canada) Annual Meeting San Francisco, California USA 2015 April 9–11 LESI Management & Delegates’ Meeting (IMDM) Brussels, Belgium April 12–15 LESI Annual Conference Brussels, Belgium LESI Management Committees Chairs & Co-Chairs Audit Awards Communications Education Endowment External Relations Investment IP Maintenance Legal Long-Range Planning Meetings Membership Nominations Peter Hess Heinz Goddar Thierry Sueur Ned Barlas Jeff Whittle Rob McInnes Dwight Olson Art Rose Patrick O’Reilley Sun Kim Yorikatsu Hohokabe Jonas Gulliksson Wisam Hirzalla Ron Grudziecki François Painchaud Junichi Yamazaki Russell Levine Fiona Nicholson Alan Lewis Arnaud Michel Jim Malackowski LESI Industry, Professional & Regional Committees Industry Chemicals, Energy, Environmental & Materials Consumer Products High Tech Life Sciences Rashid Kahn Achim Krebs Christopher Shaowei Andreas Winkler John Paul Pamela Cox Professional International Past-Presidents 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 les Nouvelles J. Gay M. Finnegan B. Hedberg M. Okano D. Smith J. Gaudin J. Stonier S. Heijn W. Poms H. Hodding F. Pombo M. Ariga L. Mackey P. Hug 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 D. Ryan K. Payne J. Portier F. Noetinger A. Mifune L. Evans O. Axster N. Jacobs J. Brown S. Layton Jr. R. DeBoos P. Mandros H. Goddar 2001 E. Shalloway 2002 T. Sueur 2003 M. Jager 2004 J. Gulliksson 2005 W. Manfroy 2006 P. Chrocziel 2007 R. Grudziecki 2008 C. Fukuda 2009 A. Liberman 2010 P. O’Reilley 2011 A. Lewis 2012 J. Malackowski 2013 K. Nachtrab Copyright Licensing Dispute Resolution Industry/University Government Transactions Patent & Tech Licensing Trademarks IP Valuation Regional Americas Africa and Middle East Asia Pacific European Michael Lechter Tom Filarski Claire Driscoll Pauline Khor Martin Schneider Dwight Olson Marcela Trigo de Souza Mohammed Al-Ansari Kevin Dam Audrey Yap Junko Sugimura Bruno Vandermeulen Ad Hoc Committees Business Forums Global Technology Impact Forum Bill Elkington Young Members Congress IP Strategy Tilman Mueller-Stoy Subramaniam Vutha Hector Chagoya Martin Schneider December 2013 2014 SEMINAR SERIES www.e-mergeglobal.com U.S. trademark practice Seminar SUmmer patent Seminar advanced patent & LicenSing Seminar This one week seminar is designed to provide a comprehensive overview of U.S. trademark practice. Beginning with introductory lectures on the U.S. trademark system, subject matter becomes more complex throughout the week. Our knowledgeable lecturers draw from years of experience in the trademark field and focus on real life case examples. A three and a half week seminar covering all major areas of U.S. patent law, beginning with an overview of the U.S. patent system and moving on to more complex subjects such as patent prosecution, infringement litigation, and post-grant procedures. Includes practical problems and discussion of recent cases where applicable, with a focus on how practice is changing in view of the America Invents Act (AIA). This two week seminar focuses on advanced topics in U.S. patent law and includes workshops and problem solving in order to illustrate the more advanced concepts with regard to prosecution, claim interpretation, and validity and infringement issues. Participants learn how to modify and determine the scope of a granted U.S. patent, as well as how to address significant licensing issues. JOURNAL OF Mar. THE LICENSING EXECUTIVES 31 - apr. 4, 2014 June 4 - 27, 2014 SOCIETY INTERNATIONAL Fall 2014 Infringement Monitoring We are the patent and technology research company Seminars held at BSKB’s Offices in: Metropolitan Washington, DC 8110 Gatehouse Road, Suite 100E Falls Church, VA 22042 t: 703.205.8000 | f: 703.205.8050 bskb.com | [email protected] © 2013 Birch, Stewart, Kolasch & Birch, LLP. All rights reserved. Client:of Birch, Kolasch & Birch, LLP (BSKB) We are pleased to announce the publication . .Stewart, . ContaCt: Elizabeth Richards, [email protected], 703.205.8000 Guide to Intangible Asset Valuation ae: Jeff Lupisella x225 PRojeCt: BSKB-073 ‘13 Ad Placement Run date: Oct 2013 PM: Jeff Lupisella x225 VeR. : horizontal format Mod. date: 10.23.13 Wed 1:59 PM LES Print Ad P. Schweihs 4CP: n n n n by Robert F. Reilly and Pub: Robert Size: 7” x 4.75” Confidential: Information contained within this document is only intended for the recipient. Copying, distribution or communication of this document is stricly prohibited. 13221 Woodland Park Rd., Suite 420, Herndon, VA 20171 tel 703.437.8018 fax 703.437.8268 vizual.com This 700-page book, published in 2013 by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, explores the disciplines of intangible asset analysis, economic damages, and transfer price analysis. Guide to Intangible Asset Valuation examines the economic attributes and the economic influences that create, monetize, and transfer the value of intangible assets and intellectual property. Illustrative examples are provided throughout the book, and detailed examples are presented for each generally accepted intangible asset valuation approach and method. Patent Search Services Technology/Innovation Research White Space Analysis Claim Charting/Infringement Analysis Portfolio Analysis Patent Licensing Support Services Portfolio Management Patent Due Diligence Landscaping Studies Patent Drafting Reach us Available for purchase for $122.50 plus shipping from www.willamette.com/books_intangibles.html. USA: 1-888-247-1618 India: +91-44-2231 0321 [email protected] Willamette Management Associates www.willamette.com Robert Reilly and Bob Schweihs are managing directors of Willamette Management Associates, an intangible asset and intellectual property analysis, business valuation, forensic analysis, and financial opinion firm. DECEMBER 2013 JOURNAL JOURNAL OF OF THE THE LICENSING LICENSING EXECUTIVES EXECUTIVES SOCIETY SOCIETY INTERNATIONAL INTERNATIONAL “A penny for their thoughts!” Maybe that’s crossed your own mind once or twice when dealing with EPO examiners and their search reports and communications? Search Matters 2014 www.epo.org/search-matters JOURNAL OF THE LICENSING EXECUTIVES SOCIETY INTERNATIONAL 3 - 4 April The Hague, The Netherlands Volume XLVIII No. 4 LES NOUVELLES Join us for the EPO’s outstanding training opportunity for patent search professionals: les Nouvelles December 2013 Advancing the Business of Intellectual Property Globally Where Are We Going in High Tech? Assessing High Tech: Observations And Patterns Annemarie Meike — Page 214 Trends And Opportunities In Semiconductor Licensing Stefan Tamme, Stephen Schott, Dogan Gunes, Jeffrey Wallace, Richard Boadway, Frank Razavi and Marc Pépin — Page 216 Trends And Observations In Software Susan O. Goldsmith, Ian G. DiBernardo, Frank L. Bernstein, Scott Smedresman, Michael Gulliford AND Richard P.W. Stobbe — Page 229 Trends In Mobile And Consumer Electronics Ram Menon and Kevin Spivak — Page 238 Samsung And LG: From Also-Rans To Dominance In Consumer Electronics Robert A. Myers— Page 246 Licensing-In From The First-To-File: The Strategy Of Filing Early Concepts As Incomplete Patent Applications James Anglehart — Page 253 Kirtsaeng v. Wiley Incentivizes Digital Distribution Ilaria Maggioni — Page 260 Introduction: The Growing Risk From Australian IP Licensing Amalia Stone — Page 263 Evolving Intellectual Property Regimes In Turkey And University Inventions: The New Article 6 Of The Patent Law And Its Impact On University Inventions Omer HIZIROGLU and Iclal ARGUC — Page 268 Phases Of Growth In University Technology Transfer Tom Hockaday — Page 275 Recent U.S. Court Decisions And Developments Affecting Licensing John Paul and Brian Kacedon — Page 280
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