Sunday, August 4, 2013

Yes we FRAND: various pending ITC complaints over standard-essential patents may be withdrawn

After yesterday's Presidential, essential veto it's still not impossible that someone might win a U.S. import ban over FRAND-pledged standard-essential patents (SEPs) at some point, but only under rare and narrow circumstances, subject to criteria that won't be met unless an accused implementer doesn't makes a major, stupid mistake.

Some players who favor superstrong SEP enforcement and supra-FRAND SEP licensing terms -- Qualcomm, InterDigital, Tessera, LSI -- are among the members of a lobby group named the Innovation Alliance, which has advocated relatively broad access to injunctive relief over SEPs in submissions to the ITC and other government agencies. The Innovation Alliance is nothing short of shocked. Here's its reaction to the veto:

"Innovation Alliance Expresses Strong Disappointment of Disapproval Decision in 794 Investigation, Believes It Will Increase Litigation and Depress Innovation

'The Innovation Alliance is tremendously disappointed by the administration's decision to disapprove the exclusion order in the 794 investigation. The letter to the International Trade Commission offers no explanation of the reasons for the disapproval, presenting participants in standard setting bodies with perhaps the worst of all possible outcomes – a decision that overturns decades of settled understanding without clear guidance to the parties to inform their future FRAND negotiations.

'Although the letter emphasizes that it is beyond the scope of the policy review to revisit the facts as found by the Commission, that appears to be precisely what the administration has done in this instance. Given the facts the Commission found, the Innovation Alliance is at a loss to explain the disapproval any other way.

'The decision is particularly damaging given that the patent at issue was never found to be standard essential, but was only declared by its owner that it might be or might in the future become essential. It is hard to see how this decision will do anything but lead to less participation in standard setting bodies and more litigation involving not just standard essential patents, but also declared-standard essential patents. That is bad for innovation and bad for U.S. consumers.'

The tone is no surprise. The largest member of the Innovation Alliance, Qualcomm, has previously taken a rather aggressive stance on the Administration's SEP-related efforts, threatening court challenges to regulatory decisions. The above statement criticizes the United States Trade Representative's veto letter to the ITC for lack of specificity. But a conclusion that a certain ruling is against the public interest is different from a judicial decision. I guess what the Innovation Alliance really dislikes is that the ITC's reasoning, which was very detailed but irreconcilable with general antitrust and FRAND-related contract law (except for one commissioner's dissent), has been rejected. Had it not been, then the ITC standard (unless reversed on appeal, which I'm quite sure would have happened) would have been that any SEP holder who creates the appearance of being a willing licensor is entitled to exclusion orders -- instead of every reasonable implementer being able to rely on a FRAND licensing pledge.

Unlike the Innovation Alliance, I'm not in the slightest concerned about incentives for participation in standard-setting. Industry players will continue to develop industry standards, companies will continue to have an interest in influencing the process, and right holders will continue to see opportunity in the inclusion of their patented techniques in the specifications of standards. As an Intel lawyer accurately noted at a Senate hearing on SEPs a few days ago, most SEPs cover insignificant contributions to the state of the art and are powerful only thanks to inclusion in a standard. Prior to standard-setting, there are numerous alternatives. Thus most SEPs would otherwise have little (if any!) commercial value in a world of choice. If you own a SEP, you don't have to compete with those other alternatives, and you get a large number of implementers required to license your IP. That is a huge incentive even if you're not allowed to overcharge or, what Samsung and Google/Motorola really want, force others to tolerate infringement of non-SEPs.

The Innovation Alliance complains about a lack of "clear guidance to the parties to inform their future FRAND negotiations". There can always be more clarity. The statement actually shows that the Innovation Alliance has read the writing on the wall. So there's much more guidance already than it concedes.

SEP holders and abusers are going to read the writing on the wall and draw the appropriate conclusions. Let's take a quick look at the implications for some of the most important disputes and the usual suspects.

Implications for Samsung v. Apple

The Korean electronics giant, which has been found by multiple courts to infringe Apple's non-SEPs and may soon be found to have engaged in unfair competition by copying Apple's products, can now forget about getting leverage over Apple anytime soon through the pursuit of SEP-based import bans.

In December, after failures in four different European courts to win SEP-based injunctions against Apple, Samsung withdrew all of its European SEP-based injunction requests. A few days later the European Commission nevertheless issued a Statement of Objections (SO), a preliminary antitrust ruling. The U.S. decision does nothing to discourage European Commission Vice President Almunia from standing in for FRAND and fair competition.

In other jurisdictions than the U.S. and the EU, Samsung is also unlikely to obtain injunctions. Earlier this year it lost a case in Japan. In Australia, various Samsung SEP assertions against Apple will go to trial soon, and the judge there has already called that part of the dispute "ridiculous". Ultimately, South Korea, where an antitrust investigation is also underway, is unlikely to turn its country into the FRAND rogue state that the ITC majority almost made the United States.

Just like Google's Motorola, which has shifted its focus to monetary claims (and is probably going to suffer a setback in that regard in its favorite court), Samsung may now also have to focus on monetization rather than mutually assured destruction. At the end of his letter to the ITC, Ambassador Froman says that Samsung should seek relief in court. Obviously the White House cannot veto court decisions or tell courts what to do (the ITC is a trade agency, not a court). But if Samsung can't obtain injunctive relief at the ITC, everyone knows that Samsung is not realistically going to win injunctions in U.S. district court under the eBay standard.

So far Samsung hasn't even won a SEP-based liability finding in district court, without which there are obviously no remedies. Its next chance on the liability front will be at the trial in the second California litigation, scheduled to start on March 31, 2014.

Samsung now has to decide whether to accelerate the pursuit of monetary compensation over the SEP that the ITC found Apple to infringe or whether to keep pushing, on appeal, for an ITC import ban over the non-SEPs the ITC did not find violated. In parallel to its June 2011 ITC complaint involving SEPs as well as non-SEPs, Samsung filed a mirror (companion) lawsuit in the District of Delaware. That one was stayed pending resolution of the ITC investigation including any appeals. Samsung can't appeal the Presidential veto; it could, however, appeal the part of the ITC ruling that threw out its non-SEP claims. Should any finding of no violation of a non-SEP be reversed on appeal, an import ban will be ordered (the veto was completely FRAND-specific). But Samsung's non-SEP claims were very weak and I doubt that the Federal Circuit would hand it a liability finding. I think it would make sense for Samsung to not appeal. If it accepts the ITC ruling as the final ruling on the investigation, it can immediately ask the United States District Court for the District of Delaware to unfreeze the federal litigation. The ITC ruling isn't binding on the Delaware court in any way, but it does have some persuasive power. Should Samsung prevail on liability over the same SEP (and/or the other SEP-in-suit) in district court, then it will be entitled to monetary relief, which the ITC can't award.

Theoretically, Samsung could try to get both, but I doubt that it would work. Samsung would only appeal the ITC ruling with respect to other patents than the SEP that was found infringed, and it could ask the Delaware-based court to unfreeze the case only with respect to that SEP (and possibly also the other SEP-in-suit, which was not found infringed, but with respect to which Samsung would never win an ITC import ban after yesterday's veto). But in an Apple v. HTC case, the Delaware court actually stayed almost all of the litigation pending between those two parties even though only a subset of the patents-in-suit were being asserted in parallel at the ITC. If Samsung wants to optimize for monetary relief over SEPs, it must refrain from appealing the ITC ruling.

Implications for other disputes and parties

In my second update to yesterday's immediate reaction to the veto, I already noted that there are other disputes in which Samsung may benefit from it. And I mentioned the ITC investigations of Ericsson and InterDigital's complaints. In the InterDigital case Samsung can only benefit because it's just a defendant; in the dispute with Ericsson it's more complicated because both parties are asserting SEPs (and some non-SEPs) against each other, and Samsung might have hoped for "mutually assured destruction", knowing that it's sure to end up the net payer in a settlement under normal circumstances.

Ericsson and/or Samsung may now withdraw their SEPs from the related ITC investigations and ask the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas to adjudge those claims. If the Texas-based court declines to resume those litigations because there are still some non-SEPs pending at the ITC, then Ericsson and Samsung will have to make the kind of decision I described above: maybe they will drop their non-SEPs in order to accelerate an award of monetary relief over SEPs.

Even InterDigital will have to think hard about whether there's a point in pursuing ITC investigations over its SEPs. The stock market will certainly draw its conclusions for InterDigital's stock price from the fact that ITC import bans over FRAND-pledged SEPs are now going to be very, very difficult to obtain. A preliminary ITC ruling on InterDigital's complaint found no infringement of a valid InterDigital patent by Nokia, Huawei or ZTE, but dismissed the respondents' FRAND defenses and, in a departure from settled antitrust law, blessed InterDigital's approach of insisting that implementers take worldwide licenses despite major differences in the strength of InterDigital's portfolios in various jurisdictions.

The mirror lawsuit to InterDigital's 2011 complaint against Nokia, Huawei and ZTE was stayed pending resolution of the ITC investigation. The companion lawsuits to the 2013 complaints (which targeted those three companies and Samsung) were not stayed because defendants wanted to press on with the district court case. Nokia, Huawei and ZTE were particularly interested in getting a district court ruling (also a FRAND rate determination) before an ITC import ban, but the Delaware judge declined to engage in a race with the ITC. Nokia, Huawei and ZTE still proposed a rather ambitious schedule for the federal litigation, while Samsung sided with InterDigital and advocated a slower schedule. Now that it's virtually certain that InterDigital won't be able to win an ITC import ban, InterDigital may withdraw its ITC complaints and focus on district court litigation -- and in that case Nokia, Huawei and ZTE will actually be less interested in swift resolution. When the parties took their position on the district court's case schedule, they didn't know how the situation would change because of yesterday's Presidential veto. Therefore, InterDigital and three of the defendants took positions on case management that actually run counter to what would benefit them now under the new circumstances. Samsung basically did the right thing anyway.

Unlike InterDigital, which is a non-practicing entity, Qualcomm does have a huge product business. And it doesn't currently have any SEP assertions pending at the ITC. But SEPs play a major strategic role in Qualcomm's business -- directly (in licensing) and indirectly (with licensing-related considerations making its products more attractive). Qualcomm's leverage has just been reduced. It will have to content itself with FRAND royalties, and it will have to sell its products on their technological merits, which is the way it should be.

I know this is old news, but the veto also demonstrates once again that Google overpaid for Motorola Mobility.

Finally let me also mention the dispute between LSI/Agere and Realtek. Judge Whyte in the Northern District of California barred LSI/Agere from enforcing an ITC import ban, in the event it was going to obtain one (this decision has been appealed to the Ninth Circuit). In the meantime the initial determination (preliminary ruling) on that ITC complaint has come down, and there was no finding of a SEP violation. Even if this changed as a result of the Commission review, an import ban is now far less likely.

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Saturday, August 3, 2013

Obama Administration vetoes ITC import ban of older iPhones and iPads over Samsung patent

The United States Trade Representative (USTR), to whom the White House has delegated the authority to veto ITC rulings, has just announced the decision to veto an early-June ITC ruling, which would otherwise have taken effect on Monday, to ban the importation of older iPhones and iPads into the United States market over a Samsung declared-essential patent. Here's the letter (this post continues below the document):

13-08-03 USTR Letter Vetoing ITC-794 Exclusion Order

This is a victory for consumers and fair competition, and it also shows that Commissioner Dean Pinkert, one of the six leaders of the ITC, appropriately dissented from the majority decision, which was a total outlier with respect to injunctive relief over standard-essential patents (SEPs).

The reason for the veto is the Administration's concern over the implications of exclusion orders over SEPs except "in some circumstances, such as where the putative licensee is unable or refuses to take a FRAND license and is acting outside the scope of the patent holder's commitment to license on FRAND terms" or "if a putative licensee is not subject to the jurisdiction of a court that could award damages" (these quotes are from a joint policy paper of the Department of Justice and United States Patent and Trademark Office on SEPs and injunctive relief).

This is the first veto of an ITC ruling in decades, and I believe the ITC's majority opinion was so out of step with basic antitrust rules (such as tying) and its effects would have been so very anticompetitive and anti-innovative that this veto was unfortunately necessary. The issue here is not primarily what would have happened to those older iPhones and iPads -- I'm sure Apple could have handled the situation somehow. The problem is that this would have made the ITC the forum of choice for SEP abusers (strategic abusers who want to get away with infringement of non-SEPs as well as overly aggressive monetizers).

In recent days and weeks there had been more and more support for Apple's request for this veto. Most notably, a bipartisan group of United States Senators expressed concerns over the ban in a letter to the USTR. Last month it became known that AT&T had asked the USTR, Ambassador Michael Froman, to make this decision. Verizon's general counsel, Randal Milch, took the same position in a Wall Street Journal op-ed. The WSJ also reported on support from BSA | The Software Alliance. Roger Parloff, senior editor of Fortune (part of the CNN Money network), also advocated a veto in an opinion piece, as did Orrick Herrington Sutcliffe partner Jay Jurata, a leading Washington, DC antitrust lawyer.

I'm sure that it wasn't an easy decision to veto the only significant win Samsung had scored against Apple in the earth-spanning patent dispute between the two companies, considering the special relationship between the U.S. and South Korea, but the USTR's letter makes very clear that this is not about taking sides with or against any particular company -- it's all about protecting the industry standard-setting system against the abusive pursuit of injunctive relief by certain players. At the very end, the letter makes clear that Samsung "may continue to pursue its rights through the courts", seeking monetary copensation.

This decision moots Apple's motion for a stay of the exclusion order pending an appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.

Ambassador Froman's letter instructs the ITC, which I believe has acted in connection with this investigation like a government agency that is out of control, to proceed more cautiously in other cases involving FRAND-pledged SEPs. In those cases, "the Commission should be certain to (1) to [sic] examine thoroughly and carefully on its own initiative the public interest issues presented both at the outset of its proceeding and when determining whether a particular remedy is in the public interest and (2) seek proactively to have the parties develop a comprehensive factual record relates to these issues in the proceedings before the Administrative Law Judge and during the formal remedy phase of the investigation before the Commission, including information on the standards-essential nature of the patent at issue if contested by the patent holder and the presence or absence of patent hold-up or reverse hold-up". The U.S. trade agency should also "make explicit findings on these issues to the maximum extent possible". If the Commission does not do its job and exercise its discretion with respect to public interest considerations, then it's quite clear that more vetoes will follow.

Apart from future policy reviews of ITC decisions, the United States government is also working on measures relating to the standard applied by the ITC to decisions on import bans as well as on certain shortcomings of the enforcement process following ITC exclusion orders.

[Update] According to a tweet citing CNBC, Apple "applaud[s] the Administration for standing up for innovation in this landmark case" and Samsung was "wrong to abuse [the] patent system this way". [/Update]

[Update 2] I'd like to add one more thing. While Samsung certainly considers the dispute with Apple its most important ongoing patent spat, it will also benefit from the Administration's defense of FRAND in cases in which the shoe is on the other foot. At the moment, Samsung is defending itself at the ITC against a SEP-based InterDigital complaint, and it's embroiled in a two-way dispute with Ericsson involving, in no small part, SEPs as well. [/Update]

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Google says Moto X won't be subject to ITC import bans because it's assembled in the U.S.

The popularity of the United States International Trade Commission (USITC, or just ITC) as a patent litigation forum is largely attributable to the difficulties patent holders face in U.S. federal court. District courts are usually slower than the ITC, and even after final liability findings in your favor, it's still doubtful whether -- and when -- you're going to obtain meaningful remedies. The state of affairs in the first Apple v. Samsung litigation in the Northern District of California is a good example: the complaint was filed in April 2011, and in August 2012 a jury found Samsung to infringe half a dozen Apple patents. The court declined to overrule the jury on these liability findings, but Apple was denied a permanent injunction (the related appellate hearing will take place next Friday) and to date has not received even one cent of damages.

By contrast, Samsung's June 2011 ITC complaint against Apple resulted in a liability finding only with respect to a FRAND-pledged standard-essential patent (SEP), but the ITC ordered an import ban in a controversial outlier decision, which will take effect on Monday unless stayed or vetoed at the 11th hour. A ruling on Apple's ITC countercomplaint against Samsung is due next Friday, so Apple may also win an ITC import ban prior to any actual remedy in district court.

The ITC's willingness to order import bans over FRAND-pledged SEPs, its outlier positions on the antitrust issue of tying (1, 2) and the easy access to injunctions it provides to patent trolls are policy issues. Despite concerns about the efficiency and transparency of the related enforcement procedures and a drop-out rate of patent assertions by major operating companies near the 100% mark, patent infringers still fear the ITC.

Google's Motorola Mobility is a company that has been unable to prevail on any offensive claim so far at the ITC. It has three appeals of dismissals of its ITC claims going (1, 2, 3). It has been successful in its defense against Apple's complaint (Apple appealed that dismissal), but in May 2012 Microsoft won an import ban against Motorola's Android-based devices implementing a particular scheduling feature, and Microsoft is working hard to prevail on several more patents with an appellate hearing to take place on Tuesday (August 6).

Contrary to popular misbelief, ITC import bans are usually not limited to particular devices but relate to all devices by a particular company infringing a patent in a certain way, unless there are differences with respect to licensing (for example, Samsung affirmatively did not accuse newer Apple products, which come with Qualcomm baseband chipsets, of infringement of its UMTS SEP).

Thus it wouldn't matter that the new Moto X smartphone was not available at the time of the investigation of Microsoft and Apple's complaints. But in a filing in the enforcement-related dispute between Microsoft and certain government agencies and officials, Google states another reason for which the Moto X, in its opinion, falls outside the scope of an ITC import ban such as the one obtained by Microsoft (click on the image to enlarge or read the text below the image):

"Motorola recently announced a new line of phones, the Moto X™, that will be assembled in the United States and are therefore not subject to the exclusion order. [...]"

Forbes contributor Tim Worstall explained the difference between Made in America and Assembled in America in a recent post. The only part of the manufacturing of the Moto X phone that takes place in the United States is final assembly. Arguably, Google's emphasis of assembly in the U.S. is a marketing ploy. It may also be politically-motivated. And it's fairly likely that Google's analysis of the upside and downside of assembly in the U.S. also involved a plan for an end run around the ITC's jurisdiction.

In a 2011 ruling on an S3 Graphics complaint against Apple, the ITC clarified the boundaries of its mandate. The ITC can prohibit the importation of devices that infringe an asserted patent claim if the act of importation itself constitutes a violation -- as opposed to post-importation activities by the importer. For the Moto X, multiple components of wil be shipped in a non-assembled form to the U.S., and it's possible that Google's Motorola ensures that the Android software is installed only in the U.S. and not prior to importation. If an infringement dispute ever arises with respect to the Moto X, we'll all find out more about the manufacturing chain for this device. For now, what's clear is Google's position: it believes that final assembly in the U.S. puts the product outside the scope of an ITC exclusion order. If Google is right, patent holders can only assert their rights by suing in U.S. federal court (or in foreign jurisdictions), and Apple v. Samsung shows how difficult and time-consuming that process is.

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Friday, August 2, 2013

Google's Motorola intervenes in Microsoft lawsuit against U.S. Customs, moves for outright dismissal

Last month Microsoft filed a complaint (and a simultaneous motion for a preliminary injunction) with the United States District Court for the District of Delaware to ensure enforcement of a May 2012 ITC exclusion order against Motorola's Android-based devices implementing a particular patented invention (the patent relates to scheduling meetings from a mobile device). Microsoft disagrees with a decision by the United States Bureau of Customs and Border Protection, which enforces ITC import bans through border seizures, and complains that the decision came down before it was heard the way an affected right holder should be.

It comes as no surprise that Google's Motorola Mobility wants to participate in the proceedings. Today it brought two motions: a motion to intervene (which Microsoft does not oppose) and a motion to dismiss Microsoft's complaint. Today is also the (extended) deadline for the government agencies and officials defending themselves in this action to respond to Microsoft's request for a preliminary injunction.

This is the motion (this post continues below the document):

13-08-02 Motorola Mobility Motion to Dismiss Microsoft Complaint Against U.S. Customs

Motorola's motion to dismiss makes a legal argument. Primarily (though not exclusively), the Google subsidiary says that the key issue -- whether the ITC exclusion relates only to use of the relevant patent in connection with the ActiveSync protocol or also (as Microsoft says) in connection with Google Calendar -- should be resolved by the ITC, and if Microsoft disagreed with the ITC's decision, it could always appeal to the Federal Circuit. So there's a disagreement on the proper procedural path, but Google's motion doesn't allege that Microsoft's factual representations were wrong. If there are any disagreements on the facts, we'll only find out about them after some other filings are made.

The motion also doesn't address one of the things I'd particularly like to know: how can Microsoft have waived or abandoned its infringement allegations relating to Google Calendar (which it made at the outset in the form of a detailed infringement claim chart) if Motorola (as it appears) never disputed infringement (it focused just on the alleged invalidity of the patent)? At some point the defendants and the intervenor will have to explain this.

On a related note, the Federal Circuit will hold a hearing on the parties' cross-appeal of the ITC ruling next Tuesday (August 6, 2013). It's a cross-appeal because Google wants to overturn the ban, while Microsoft wants to broaden the scope of its victory, arguing that several more patents are also valid and infringed.

[Update] Later on Friday, the government of the United States and Google's Motorola Mobility filed their opposition briefs to Microsoft's motion for a preliminary injunction (Government's brief, Google's brief). I will go into more detail on this as the process unfolds. [/Update]

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Verizon, advertising agencies and Ford want to go to bat for Judge Posner at Federal Circuit hearing

On September 11, 2013, the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit will conduct a hearing on the Apple v. Motorola cross-appeal of Judge Posner's dismissal of a two-way lawsuit in the Northern District of Illinois in June 2012. The most influential part of Judge Posner's ruling has been the one related to Motorola's pursuit of excessive damages and injunctive relief over standard-essential patents (SEPs), but he also denied those remedies to Apple over certain non-SEPs.

Many major stakeholders have filed amicus curiae briefs in connection with this appeal. Most recently I reported on Microsoft's brief. Three amici -- Verizon Communications, the American Association of Advertising Agencies, and Ford Motor Company -- brought a motion on Thursday evening because they are eager to participate in the September 11, 2013 hearing (this post continues below the document):

13-08-01 Verizon AdvAgencies Ford Motion to Participate in Hearing

Verizon, Ford and the advertising agencies declare themselves in "substantial agreement with Judge Posner's reasoning on the remedial issues in this case", referring to the FRAND SEP and the non-SEP parts alike. They oppose injunctive relief over FRAND-pledged SEPs as well as over "only a minor component in a multi-component device", and they want reasonable royalty damages to be "constrained by the value of the patented technology over alternatives at the time of the design decision". This across-the-board support of Judge Posner's ruling means that Verizon and friends oppose both appeals and, by extension, agree and disagree with either party.

Considering that Verizon, Ford and the advertising agencies take a position that's really in between those of the parties, it's interesting to see that Apple is far more open-minded about their desire to participate in the hearing than Google is:

"Apple has advised that it takes no position on this motion, so long as any time allocation is added to the time that has already been granted, but opposes any accommodation that would decrease the time already allocated. Motorola will file an opposition."

I'm not an expert in the admissibility of oral argument by amici curiae at appellate hearings. Whatever the appeals court will decide, the mere fact that these three amici want to participate in the hearing, which will come with a significant cost including preparation, shows that patent remedies -- especially, but not only, with respect to SEPs -- are of major concern to them and that they are willing to put their money where their mouth is.

Last month, Verizon's general counsel, Randal Milch, wrote an op-ed for the Wall Street Journal entitled "Samsung vs. Apple Needs an Obama Intervention", referring to the otherwise-imminent U.S. import ban of older iPhones and iPads (over a FRAND-pledged, declared-essential Samsung patent) that major industry players and, especially, four United States Senators from both sides of the aisle are also concerned about. Unless that ban is vetoed or stayed, it will take effect this coming Monday. The ITC ruling is totally antithetical to Judge Posner's position, except for Commissioner Pinkert's well-reasoned dissent.

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Thursday, August 1, 2013

ITC postpones final ruling on Apple's complaint against Samsung by eight days to August 9, 2013

The United States International Trade Commission (USITC, or ITC) has just given notice of its decision to postpone by eight days its final ruling on Apple's patent infringement complaint against Samsung. The ruling was scheduled for today, and widely anticipated, but we'll all have to wait another week to find out.

In an October 2012 preliminary ruling, Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Thomas Pender found Samsung to infringe four valid Apple patents (one design patent and three technical patents). Prior to the full review that is now ongoing, the Commission, the six-member decision-making body at the top of the U.S. trade agency, had remanded certain issues to the ALJ, and the remand resulted in a finding of additional violations by Android's text selection feature.

August 9 is an important date for the wider Apple-Samsung dispute. On that day, the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit is going to hold a hearing on Apple's appeal of a district court's denial of a permanent injunction against multiple Samsung products over half a dozen patents found infringed.

Today's postponement has the effect that an import ban Samsung won against older iPhones and iPads in early June will, unless vetoed by the United States Trade Representative, take effect before a final ruling on Apple's complaint, which will then be followed by the statutory 60-day Presidential review period if Apple obtains an exclusion order. The Presidential review period for the limited exclusion order obtained by Samsung ends this weekend. There has been more and more support for a Presidential veto, particularly from a bipartisan group of United States Senators. Today a Washington, DC-based antitrust lawyer published an opinion piece arguing that "[the] White House Should Rein In the ITC On [Standard-Essential Patents]".

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Mitsubishi, Philips, Thomson sue Google's Motorola Mobility over MPEG-2 codec patents

Google's Motorola Mobility is no stranger to video codec patent lawsuits. It's been asserting some allegedly H.264-essential patents against Microsoft for a couple of years, though a federal judge has found that those patents are of extremely low value (in general and to Microsoft's products in particular). What goes around, comes around. The Google subsidiary is now on the receiving end of a lawsuit brought yesterday in the Southern District of Florida by MPEG-2 patent holders Mitsubishi, Philips and Thomson (this post continues below the document):

13-07-31 Mitsubishi Philips Thomson Complaint Against Motorola Mobility

Unlike the wholly-owned Google subsidiary, this Japanese-Dutch-French trio is not seeking an injunction or ITC import ban over FRAND-pledged standard-essential patents. The complaint reiterates, in its paragraph 26, each of the plaintiff's commitment "to individually license its own MPEG-2 patents on fair, reasonable and nondiscriminatory {FRAND] terms to anyone who requests such a license", in addition to Motorola Mobility having the choice to take a "one-stop shop" license from MPEG LA, also on FRAND terms.

The complaint says that Motorola Mobility, which was "one of the founding members of MPEG LA", from 1997 through 2010 "either directly or through one of its subsidiaries, received royalties from the MPEG-2 pool license and/or profits from the overall licensing activities of MPEG LA, including administration of the MPEG-2 pool license". The filing goes on to say that "Motorola to this day receives profits from the business of MPEG LA". But Motorola and its subsidiaries refused to renew their license when it expired on December 31, 2010. Interestingly, that was the end of the calendar quarter in which Motorola's dispute with Microsoft began. On October 1, 2010, Microsoft sued Motorola for Android's alleged infringement of various non-standard-essential patents. Later that month, Motorola sent Microsoft certain demand letters, one of which related to the H.264 video codec standard and stated a royalty demand amounting to roughly four billion dollars a year. In a few weeks the question of whether these demand letters constituted a breach of Motorola's FRAND contract will be put before a jury in the Western District of Washington. Microsoft brought that contract lawsuit in November 2010.

In October 2010 Motorola sued Apple, another dispute that is unresolved as of today. Yesterday's lawsuit has, by the way, been assigned to Judge Robert N. Scola, who also presides over the two-way Motorola Mobility v. Apple litigation scheduled to go to trial in Miami in a little over a year.

It could be (but probably isn't) purely coincidental that Motorola terminated a fruitful 13-year working relationship with the MPEG LA patent pool firm when it started to aggressively assert its declared-essential patents against Apple and Microsoft. Even though the MPEG-2 patent pool is not identical to the AVC/H.264 pool, it's possible that Motorola wanted to distance itself from reasonably-priced video codec patent license offers.

This new Mitsubishi et al. v. Motorola Mobility litigation creates a couple of strategic conflicts for the Google subsidiary. In order to counter whatever damages claims the three patent holders will present in the course of this litigation, Google might want to leverage Judge Robart's FRAND rate determination in some ways. Google could argue at a high level of abstraction that video codec patents in general aren't as expensive as Mitsubishi, Philips and Thomson may claim, and point to Judge Robart's decision. But that rate-setting opinion very specifically discusses the reasons for which Motorola Mobility's H.264 declared-essential patents are of limited value. What will, however, almost certainly happen is that the plaintiffs in this new Miami litigation will draw the court's and the future jury's attention to Motorola Mobility's own out-of-this-world royalty demands over video codec patents, and the positions it took on FRAND. That could become really costly for Google if things go wrong.

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