Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Samsung welcomes European Patent Office decision to invalidate Apple's touch flags patent

I have obtained a copy of a Samsung press release, dated February 4, 2014, saying that the company "welcome[s] [yesterday's] ruling [by the European Patent Office], which invalidated Apple's EP '948 utility patent". This must be a ruling in the first instance, and I assume Apple can still appeal this decision within the EPO. The patent in question is EP2098948 on a "touch event model". I knew about the recent EPO opposition hearing (by the way, the patent was also challenged by Google's Motorola Mobility) but didn't attend because Apple had not won any infringement ruling based on this patent anyway. In October 2012, a Dutch court that previously denied a preliminary injunction over this patent also sided with Samsung in the main proceeding. In September 2012, the Mannheim Regional Court cleared Samsung and Google's Motorola Mobility. Earlier that year, the England and Wales High Court deemed it invalid and additionally cleared HTC of infringement.

Samsung's press release notes that Apple had brought lawsuits over six other utility (i.e., technical) patents against it in Germany, none of which Apple has won so far (some were stayed and others dismissed, and there will be further validity proceedings and possible appeals). Samsung's lead counsel in its defensive German cases was Dr. Hendrik Timmann of the Rospatt Osten Pross firm.

The current score between these two parties in Germany is, with respect to utility (not design) patents, a "goalless draw" (soccer terminology). Samsung also asserted seven utility patents against Apple in Germany, including five it had declared essential to wireless industry standards. Its cases, too, were either dismissed or stayed. In its successful defense against all of Samsung's German infringement cases, Apple was represented by Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer's Dr. Frank-Erich Hufnagel and Wolrad Prinz zu Waldeck und Pyrmont.

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Cisco might have had a greater benefit from joining Rockstar than cross-licensing with Google

Numerous patent cross-license agreements have been struck and continue to be struck in this industry, but other than agreements that settle litigation (such as the recent Ericsson-Samsung deal), they are rarely announced. Still, more than 20 royalty-bearing Android patent license agreements have been made known, and the fewest of those settled litigation.

Obviously, all companies who announce license deals involving their patents like to reinforce key talking points on those occasions. A new trend is that companies with no intention of suing each other anyway make such announcements as part of a political and PR campaign against patent enforcement by other right holders and for far-reaching patent reform. A little over a week after Google and Samsung announced a long-term global patent license agreement, Google entered into a patent agreement with Cisco, and that press release, once again, contains political messages:

"Our agreement with Cisco will reduce the potential for litigation, letting us focus instead on building great new products," said Allen Lo, Google's Deputy General Counsel for Patents. "We're pleased to enter into this cross-license, and we welcome discussions with any company interested in a similar arrangement."

"In today's overly-litigious environment, cross-licensing is an effective way for technology companies to work together and help prevent unnecessary patent lawsuits," said Dan Lang, Cisco's Vice President of Intellectual Property. "This agreement is an important step in promoting innovation and assuring freedom of operation."

I presumed that the Google-Samsung deal involved no balance payment, and this is probably the case here as well. These are deals between companies that weren't going to sue each other anytime soon at any rate.

The relationship between Google and Cisco differs in significant ways from that between Google and Samsung. Google and Samsung are the two leading players in the Android ecosystem, and they have been using and continue to use FRAND-pledged standard-essential patents (SEPs) in similar ways against Apple and (only Google, not Samsung) against Microsoft. Cisco is a long-standing opponent of SEP abuse, though I was a bit disappointed when Cisco's antitrust director Gil Ohana supported the concept of "self-defense" in connection with SEP injunctions on a conference call last year.

But there are two important factors that unite Google and Cisco. First, they stand largely on the same side of the U.S. patent reform debate. Second, they are both being sued by the Rockstar Consortium. I reported and continue to keep an eye on Rockstar's Google and Android lawsuits. Simultaneously with Cisco, Rockstar sued cable operators such as Time Warner Cable. That part of Rockstar's activity is outside my industry focus, however.

The statements I quoted above and a reference in the press release to "actions such as patent privateering -- or the transfer of patents to patent assertion entities -- that harm consumers" suggest to me that this announcement is in no small part about Rockstar, though Rockstar is not a privateer in my opinion because it is owned by a consortium of industry players. That consortium just had to clear the market of those patents because Google was willing to spend billions of dollars (its final bid was $4.4 billion) in hopes of acquiring a nuclear patent arsenal, which could have caused serious problems, especially with respect to 4G LTE standard-essential patents.

The Rockstar Consortium even included two companies making Android devices at the time (Ericsson and Sony, who jointly owned SonyEricsson), one of which is still doing so. This shows that it was an inclusive industry group as opposed to a hostile, anti-Google gang. Presumably Cisco would have been able to join the group as well. For example, EMC was also part of it (it's not a co-owner of Rockstar as we speak, but it was part of the Rockstar bidding group and therefore won't be sued). If that is so, then Cisco made a business decision not to put up money to contribute to this market-clearing effort. And in that case, it's just a logical consequence that Rockstar now seeks patent royalties from Cisco and others.

It's too early to tell how successful the Rockstar Consortium will be in its efforts to recuperate the initial acquisition cost of those patents through royalties. It settled litigation with Huawei last month, which shows that at least one major device maker has already elected to take a license. If more deals of this kind happen, the pressure will grow on Google, Cisco, Samsung and others to follow suit. But things could take time since patent litigation is slow and large companies are increasingly inclined to defend themselves vigorously for years if necessary.

By joining the Rockstar Consortium, Cisco would have been licensed to those ex-Nortel patents and would benefit from licensing income generated from third parties. Again, the jury is still out on this, but when all is said and done, Cisco may find that it would have had a greater benefit from joining Rockstar than from issuing a press release with Google on a deal that neither settles pending litigation nor avoids any litigation that would have been reasonably likely to happen.

I guess we'll see more PR-oriented, politically-motivated patent cross-license announcements this year.

[Update] It took less than 24 hours after this post for that prediction to work out: now Samsung and Cisco also made an announcement of this kind. [/Update]

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Apple, Samsung provide final list of patents and accused products for California spring trial

Unless Apple and Samsung reach an agreement on "anti-cloning" and other key terms of a patent cross-license agreement, an outcome for which I wouldn't hold my breath at this stage, they will spar in the San Jose federal courthouse once again starting March 31, when their second two-way lawsuit (in which the parties originally asserted eight patents each) will go to trial. Their third trial in that building, that is.

Late on Tuesday by local time (early on Wednesday here), the parties notified the court and each other of their final narrowing proposals. In April 2013, Judge Lucy Koh, the federal judge presiding over their two California litigations, had ordered a narrowing of the case in several steps so as to limit the number of patents and products the jury will have to look at. I previously reported on three rounds of semi-voluntary narrowing: in May 2013, the parties listed 22 products each; in June 2013, they dropped two patents each; and in September 2013, they provided a shortlist of five patents each that they wanted to take to trial, still with well over one claim per patent, on average. In January 2014, a further narrowing -- only of Samsung's offensive case -- occurred by means of summary judgment resulting in the (appealable, but final with a view to the upcoming trial) invalidation of one of Samsung's patents.

The parties are allowed take five patent claims each to trial. After the September narrowing, they both would have been free to choose one claim per patent, i.e., to maximize the number of different patents-in-suit, which would have been the logical choice for both. After summary judgment, only Apple was still able to do so. Samsung, however, had only four patents left. The logical choice for it was (and that's the one it made indeed) to take all four different patents to trial, but with the luxury to assert a second claim of one of the four patents (typically not nearly as useful as a whole additional patent, but better than nothing).

In the following section I will list the patent claims chosen for trial; then, the accused products, along with an explanation as to the impact on newer products that are not on the list; and finally I'll discuss a decision by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) relating to Apple's auto-complete patent that won't affect the outcome of the spring trial in any way but could lead to further decisions that might be relevant to post-trial proceedings including an appeal.

Asserted patents and patent claims

Apple's asserted patents and patent claims:

  1. U.S. Patent No. 5,946,647: claim 9

    ("data tapping" patent)

    Apple is still trying to salvage some broader claims that were declared invalid by the USPTO.

  2. U.S. Patent No. 6,847,959: claim 25

    (Siri-style unified-search patent)

  3. U.S. Patent No. 7,761,414: claim 20

    (asynchronous data synchronization)

  4. U.S. Patent No. 8,046,721: claim 8

    (slide-to-unlock image)

  5. U.S. Patent No. 8,074,172: claim 18

    (auto-complete)

    On summary judgment, this one was already found infringed by Samsung. Further below I'll discuss the ongoing reexamination of this patent by the USPTO.

Samsung's asserted patents and patent claims:

  1. U.S. Patent No. 7,756,087: claim 10

    (non-scheduled transmission over enhanced uplink data channel; declaration of standard-essentiality to ETSI in May 2006)

  2. U.S. Patent No. 7,551,596: claim 13

    (signaling control information of uplink packet data service; declaration of standard-essentiality to ETSI in May 2010)

  3. U.S. Patent No. 6,226,449: claim 27

    (recording and reproducing digital image and speech)

  4. U.S. Patent No. 5,579,239: claims 1 and 15

    (remote video transmission system)

    Any dismissals will be without prejudice, so the parties could reassert in a future lawsuit any patents and patent claims they dropped. In fact, they still have 14 "back-burner" patents left over from their first California litigation.

Accused products

Even recently I saw some filings that indicated disagreements between the parties on narrowing with respect to products. We'll see if these final proposals are now mutually acceptable or not.

Samsung products accused by Apple:

  1. Admire

  2. Galaxy Nexus

  3. Galaxy Note

  4. Galaxy Note II

  5. Galaxy S II

  6. Galaxy S II Epic 4G Touch

  7. Galaxy S II Skyrocket

  8. Galaxy S III

  9. Galaxy Tab 2 10.1

  10. Stratosphere

Apple products accused by Samsung:

  1. iPhone 4

  2. iPhone 4S

  3. iPhone 5

  4. iPad 2

  5. iPad 3

  6. iPad 4

  7. iPad Mini

  8. iPod Touch (5th generation)

  9. iPod Touch (4th generation)

  10. MacBook Pro

The parties tried hard to accuse each other's latest and greatest products, but U.S. patent litigation is slow, which is why this 2014 trial will be about 2012 and pre-2012 products. The list of accused products is relevant to two distinct remedies: damages and injunctive relief.

The market has grown, and both parties have grown, since the period of sales at issue in the first trial. In particular, Samsung's sales have increased hugely in recent years. The damages claims should be quite substantial this time around -- though there are no design patents at issue, and those accounted for the greater share of Apple's damages award(s) in the previous case ($929 million in the total of two trials) than the asserted software patents.

The companies can still file follow-on lawsuits to assert the same patents against newer products. Damages awards require a jury trial if at least one of the parties demands it. But the court would recycle some of the work done ahead of an earlier trial involving the same patents (claim construction etc.).

For injunctive relief, a new trial is not necessarily required if new products raise infringement issues involving the same patents. On Monday I explained in detail (in connection with injunction proceedings relating to the first California Apple v. Samsung case) how newer products with infringement patterns that are no more than colorably different from those found in older products would give rise to contempt sanctions even if they have new names, form factors, or new Android versions. Contempt proceedings take place before a judge, not a jury, but a new trial on the merits is needed if a new infringement pattern (even if there still is an infringement) differs significantly from one adjudicated before. There are three outcomes of a contempt proceeding against a new product: a contempt sanction (if the infringement pattern is essentially the same); a finding of non-infringement (i.e., clearance and no sanction); and a finding of a significant difference raising new issues that require a new trial on the merits.

If an injunction is denied over a particular patent, the colorable-difference issue also comes up, but in connection with post-judgment royalties (future damages, basically).

As a result of all of this, it would be mistaken to believe that the spring trial is about obsolete products. On the face of it, that appears to be the case. But that doesn't mean that it won't have serious implications for newer products, including those the parties will release in the months and years ahead.

Samsung reports some (but, for now, very limited) headway for an effort to shoot down Apple's '172 auto-complete patent

Apple is within striking distance of a favorable trial outcome concerning its '172 auto-complete patent, given that Judge Koh already ruled that Samsung infringed it and that juries don't invalidate patents nearly as often as they should (they totally overestimate the significance of a USPTO decision to grant a patent, but the clear-and-convincing evidence standard for invalidation is also too high).

In June 2013 it became known that anonymous reexamination requests had been filed against two Apple patents-in-suit: a missed telephone call management patent that Apple dropped from this case, and the '172 auto-complete patent. Samsung was probably involved with this effort -- and/or maybe Google.

In August 2013, the USPTO granted the reexamination request only in part -- and in a way that would have been useful for Samsung's purposes. But the anonymous requester(s) kept fighting for a more comprehensive review and filed a petition. That petition related to various claims the examiner refused to reexamine, particularly including claim 18, the claim-in-suit. In mid-January, the USPTO published a favorable decision on the petition, holding that the anonymous requester had indeed raised substantial new questions of patentability. This doesn't mean the USPTO now believes the patent is invalid. It merely means that reexamination is now going to take place. It's unlikely that anything spectacular will happen here before the spring trial. But further down the road there could be relevant developments in this reexamination, in which case I'm sure Samsung will notify the court again.

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Motorola Mobility takes MPEG-2 license from MPEG LA, settles disputes with Philips, Mitsubishi, Thomson

On Tuesday, patent pool firm MPEG LA announced that "Motorola Mobility LLC [a Google subsidiary for now] became licensed for its MPEG-2 products under the MPEG-2 Patent Portfolio License offered by MPEG LA" and that certain contributors to the MPEG-2 patent pool "agreed to dismiss patent infringement actions brought against Motorola in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida". In August I reported on those lawsuits filed by Philips, Mitsubishi and Thomson.

Law360 already reported in January on the stipulated dismissal of two of those lawsuits, a fact that indicated a settlement.

If Motorola Mobility had taken, in addition to an MPEG-2 license, an AVC/H.264 license, Google would no longer have been able to argue (on grounds that never convinced me) that its own MPEG LA license agreement didn't entitle Microsoft to a license grant-back on the same per-patent terms. I wouldn't be surprised to see Motorola Mobility take an AVC/H.264 license from MPEG LA as well -- or Lenovo may already have one. Anyway, Microsoft is not a contributor to the MPEG-2 pool.

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Monday, February 3, 2014

ITC staff thinks Apple is not nearly as close to a U.S. import ban of Motorola's devices as it argues

Approximately three months ago the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit denied Google's Motorola Mobility a rehearing and subsequently remanded to the United States International Trade Commission (USITC, or just ITC) the investigation of Apple's complaint against Motorola with respect to two patents-in-suit.

On January 7, 2014 the Commission (the six-member decision-making body at the top of the U.S. trade agency) asked the parties and the Office of Unfair Import Investigations (OUII, commonly referred to as "the ITC staff") for input on how to handle the remand proceedings necessitated by Apple's successful appeal. Naturally, Motorola Mobility would like to have a maximum number of opportunities to avoid an import ban on remand and raises a variety of issues that would have the desired additional effect of delay: if the Google subsidiary got its way, the investigation would have to be remanded by the Commission to an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ). Apple, equally unsurprisingly, tries to convince the Commission that the Federal Circuit opinion is the next best thing to an appellate opinion that would have directed entry of an exclusion order. In Apple's view, there's no need whatsoever for an ALJ to become involved: the Commission could directly resolve the two questions that remain in Apple's view, and obviously with the result being an import ban. The two questions Apple believes the remand is exclusively about are whether claim 10 of the '607 multipoint touchscreen patent is invalid for obviousness and whether the '828 ellipse-fitting patent is infringed under the Federal Circuit's claim construction. The additional issues raised by Motorola relate to the domestic industry requirement with respect to claim 10 of the '607 patent, a priority date issue relating to that patent, and the alleged invalidity of the '828 patent.

The parties' interests go beyond this particular investigation. Apple also asserted and withdrew -- but could at any point in time reassert -- the same patents against Samsung. It would presumably like to do so after prevailing over Motorola Mobility. And for now, Motorola Mobility still belongs to Google, which has a strategic interest in protecting Samsung (which is represented against Apple by the same lawyers).

After last week's announcement of an agreement under which Google will sell Motorola Mobility (except for most of its patents) to Lenovo (commentary on announcement, today's follow-up on the deterrent potential of Motorola's patents), a delay is even more desirable for Google because any import ban would then be only Lenovo's problem. And Lenovo might be in a better position to reach a settlement with Apple because it would be a lower-priority target.

I don't always agree with the ITC staff, and it doesn't make actual decisions but participates in certain investigations as a third party. Still it's useful to look at its recommendations. The ITC staff doesn't necessarily believe that a remand to an ALJ is necessary, but doesn't rule it out completely. It sides with Motorola on the domestic industry issue surrounding claim 10 of the '607 patent: in the original investigation, Apple satisfied the domestic industry requirement based on claim 1, and now makes more of a procedural argument that it has met the requirement and that Motorola waived this issue by not raising it on appeal. The ITC staff feels Apple still needs to prove the existence of a domestic industry in a technical sense for claim 10 of the '607 patent, and that Motorola didn't have to bring a cross-appeal (which Motorola says it couldn't even have done because it originally fended off Apple's complaint in its entirety).

The priority date issue for the '607 patent that Motorola would like raise (and which affects Motorola's ability to still pursue its invalidity defense) is real in the ITC staff's view, but "cannot be addressed on remand under the mandate rule because the Federal Circuit has already decided the larger issue of whether Perski [the prior art reference with respect to which the priority date issue is relevant) anticipated claim 10", so it can't be religitated in the staff's opinion. That part is good for Apple.

What's not so good for Apple is that the ITC staff thinks it's proper for Motorola to bring an invalidity defense against the '828 ellipse-fitting patent.

As a result of all of this, the ITC staff sees four issues to be addressed on remand, twice as many as Apple and almost as many as Motorola.

What's good for Apple, however, is that the ITC staff believes the ellipse-fitting claim construction adopted by the Federal Circuit is consistent with Apple's, basically saying that "to calculate" and "to compute" are the same thing here. But if the Commission disagreed, then the ITC staff recommends further proceedings (including the taking of additional evidence) before an ALJ.

Apple faces some hurdles before the desired import ban. If it obtains one, it will most likely be after the closing of the sale of Motorola's handset business to Lenovo.

This is a two-way dispute, and Motorola is still pursuing an import ban against Apple as well. Last month, its first of two appeals of the ITC's dismissal (there were two decisions involving different patents but relating to the same investigation) failed. But in May 2013 Google (Motorola) had filed an appeal of the final ITC decision relating to the sole patent-in-suit remaining at that stage, a proximity sensor-related patent, U.S. Patent No. 6,246,862 on a "sensor controlled user interface for portable communication device". Apple revived claim 10 of the '607 multipoint touchscreen patent on appeal thanks to secondary considerations of non-obviousness (such as the success of a new invention in the marketplace, which shows that there was something unique and non-trivial about it), and that's also a key part of Google's (Motorola's) strategy for the '862 patent: about a year ago, Google (Motorola) even quoted the official Steve Jobs biography in an attempt to persuade the ITC of its validity theory. But the Commission concluded that "there were already known solutions and market pressure to solve the problem addressed in the '862 patent of preventing inadvertent actuation of the touch sensitive inputs of a mobile device".

The ITC is now defending is dismissal of the final part of Motorola's complaint, and Apple, as an intervenor, is supporting it. In its appellate brief, the ITC says that "Motorola presented no evidence below [i.e., in the ITC proceedings], and cites to none on appeal, that sales of the iPhone were based on the features of the invention recited in claim 1 of the '862 patent". The ITC is very much focused on just defending the logic of its ruling, while Apple presents additional theories that could result in affirmance. Apple says that the ITC's claim construction was wrong, and while the ITC enjoys a whole lot of deference in some areas ("arbitrary and capricious" standard of review), its claim constructions are relatively easily overturned. If the Federal Circuit adopted Apple's claim construction, then, Apple argues, the patent is either invalid or not infringed. Apple not only supports the ITC's invalidity finding but additionally advocates a second invalidity theory. Apple is undoubtedly giving Google (Motorola) a run for the money.

The Google-Lenovo deal could also affect Google's ability to satisfy the domestic industry requirement.

I haven't looked into these cases in complete detail. If I had to make a guess based on my limited research, it would be that Google's (Motorola's) appeal is going to fail and that Apple may prevail on one of the two patents-in-suit but probably not on both at the same time.

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Facts and fiction relating to the deterrent potential of Motorola Mobility's patent portfolio

This is a follow-up to Google's sale of Motorola Mobility's mobile devices businesses to Lenovo and, particularly, the patents Google retains.

While patent applications become public after 18 months, the terms of license agreements are typically confidential business information, and so far companies' litigation strategies. As a result, there's plenty of opportunity for make-believe artists to create and propagate myths because they know they can't be conclusively disproven, no matter how unlikely or even implausible their stories may be.

There's any number of reasons for which someone may claim that thanks to Google's purchase, Android was somehow safer from patent assertions than before. That someone may simply work for Google. Or may be a friend of Google's. Or may have grossly overrated those patents in 2011/2012 and has come to realize but doesn't want to acknowledge it. Or may still not get it.

The only thing certain in this context is that the deal involved too many patents and patent applications for anyone to be able to perform a complete, definitive clearance of every single one of them. But sophisticated litigants know which categories of patents to focus on, and they have the resources and the experience to quickly evaluate the most relevant ones. Still, it's obviously preferable for Google to go into negotiations with some remaining uncertainty surrounding the strength of its patent holdings. With the tiny portfolio it had before the Motorola deal, it was too easy for its rivals to perform clearance. However, by now Google is filing thousands of patent applications per year, diminishing the benefit of those Motorola patents going forward.

Other than the challenge of definitive clearance of a portfolio of tens of thousands of IP assets, it's difficult to find hard facts in support of claims that the deal served its purpose, and actually easier to find strong indications to the contrary. If Motorola had been a more successful litigant, then it would have had serious leverage and Google could probably have converted that leverage into global Android patent peace. But that didn't happen. Instead, there are those make-believe artists -- the patent-related equivalent of astrologists -- that fool the gullible.

Knowing that my readership includes many professionals who want to find out about what's really going on in the smartphone IP arena, I'm now going to provide a list of facts (in no particular order and with some overlaps between items) that, all taken together, support the positions of Motorola patent skeptics (like me):

  1. Zero enforceable patent injunctions worldwide. Only an injunction gives a patent holder enough leverage to force a rival into a settlement.

  2. Negligible (for companies of this size) license fees that a U.S. court believes Microsoft should pay Google for its use of Motorola's standard-essential (WiFi and H.264) patents: less than $2 million per year, or one-twentieth of a percent of Motorola's original demand. By contrast, a federal jury determined (in the same case) that Google owes Microsoft $14.5 million in damages for breach of a FRAND licensing commitment.

  3. Less than two weeks before the announcement of the Motorola acquisition, Google's Chief Legal Officer accused, in a corporate blog post, "Microsoft, Oracle, Apple and other companies" of a patent litigation campaign against Android. Two and a half years have passed since that blog post. None of the three named companies has ceased to allege infringement of its intellectual property by Android devices because of fears over retaliation by Google or as a result of a global cross-license agreement with Google. Each of the three companies has since discontinued only their lowest-priority claim: Microsoft settled only with Barnes & Noble (which agreed to pay royalties on Android devices) but not with Motorola; Oracle elected not to pursue its patent infringement claims on appeal in order to focus completely on the copyright part of the case, and it appears to be on the winning track; and Apple settled only with HTC (but not Samsung and Motorola), reserving the right to sue even HTC should it "clone" its products, which is a conditio sine qua non for a future deal with Samsung as well.

    In the following bullet points I'll look more closely at what those -- and other -- strategic right holders have been doing since the Google-Motorola deal.

  4. It's unsurprising that Apple decided to focus on the dispute with Samsung. This focus is so obviously driven by market dynamics it can hardly be attributed to Google's acquisition of Motorola Mobility.

    Apple may not have brought a new patent infringement lawsuit against Android since the formal closing of the Google-Motorola deal in late May 2012 -- at least I'm not aware of any lawsuit that was filed after that date, though there's so much litigation going on between these parties around the globe that I can't even rule it out. But the focus on the formal closing date of the "Googlorola" deal is wrong in any event. The deal was announced in August 2011, and cleared by U.S. antitrust enforcers (i.e., in the jurisdiction in which both deal partners were based) and the European Commission in mid-February 2012. If Motorola's patents had had much of a deterrent potential, the behavior of litigants would have been affected by the announcement of the deal in August 2011 and, additionally, by U.S. and EU clearance in February 2012. However, Apple kept filing patent infringement claims against Android not only after the announcement of the merger agreement but also in the period between U.S./EU clearance and formal closing. Examples:

  5. Ericsson sued Samsung in November&nsp;2012, mostly over wireless communications patents that are Android-unrelated but to a smaller extent over patents allegedly infringed by Android and Android components. Last week Samsung agreed to pay substantial license fees.

  6. Microsoft has consistently advocated licensing -- not litigation -- as the solution to the Android IP problem and continues to do so. That's why one needs to focus on licensing more so than on litigation when looking for indications that Microsoft's IP assertions against Android were (or were not) affected by the Google-Motorola deal. Microsoft has announced 20 royalty-bearing Android patent license deals with device makers and manufacturers. 15 of those 20 deals -- three-quarters -- were struck after the announcement of the Google-Motorola merger agreement. The most notable licensees who signed up between the merger agreement and U.S./EU clearance are Acer, LG and Samsung. After the formal closing of the acquisition, Microsoft signed eight of the 20 Android license deals, most notably the ones with Foxconn and ZTE. If the Motorola deal had achieved what Google once hoped it would (in the aforementioned corporate blog post, Google complained about Microsoft seeking royalties from Samsung and other Android OEMs), someone would have had to refuse to take a license from Microsoft in hopes of Google using Motorola's patents to solve the problem through a global cross-licensing agreement. But no one in this industry apparently believed Google would be able to help in any way, so Microsoft kept on signing up licensees.

  7. Nokia has already obtained several patent infringement rulings against HTC in multiple jurisdictions and is also suing ViewSonic, a lower-priority target. In a Friday blog post I pointed out that Nokia started those disputes shortly before the formal closing of the Google-Motorola deal (but well after the announcement and U.S./EU regulatory clearance) and has kept filing new assertions against HTC ever since. In fact, Nokia's lawsuits in five of the seven jurisdictions in which it's suing HTC were filed after the formal closing of the Google-Motorola deal. New filings were also added in the two jurisdictions in which the dispute with HTC started (U.S. and Germany).

  8. The Rockstar Consortium's owners are Apple, BlackBerry, Ericsson, Microsoft, and Sony. It owns thousands of patents acquired out of the Nortel bankruptcy estate in 2011. On Halloween 2013, Rockstar sued Google and seven Android device makers. One of the defendants, Huawei, has already settled and is now presumably paying Android patent royalties.

    Google obviously couldn't countersue Rockstar itself over any Motorola patents: Rockstar doesn't make any products. Its owners do. It's unknown how much influence the owners have over Rockstar's management's decisions to bring and pursue patent assertions, and presumably none of the owners can singlehandedly instigate or settle litigation. Still, Rockstar's owners are well-known industry players and not hiding behind a front company. If they feared that Google would sue them aggressively over Motorola's patents (and other patents it holds), then I believe (though I can't prove it) these lawsuits wouldn't have happened.

Google's purchase of Motorola Mobility has not had any measurable impact on third-party patent assertions against Android. Instead, there are various indications that the Android patent mess remained the same after the announcement and even the formal closing of the deal. However, the acquisition enabled Google to prevent internecine wars among Android device makers: Motorola was making thinly-veiled threats in that regard.

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Samsung concerned about resellers' fear and uncertainty in case Apple wins an injunction

On Thursday (January 30), Judge Lucy Koh (Northern District of California) held a hearing on Apple and Samsung's post-trial motions following the recent limited damages retrial and, which was the more important item on the agenda, Apple's renewed motion for a permanent injunction against Samsung's Android-based devices over three multi-touch software patents (that blog post includes a patent-by-patent impact assessment; for my report on Samsung's opposition brief, see this post). The injunction issue is important with a view to the proceedings that will follow the trial scheduled to begin on March 31. Apple has already won its first new infringement finding ahead of trial (though it still needs to defend the validity of that patent).

I have seen two news agency reports on the Thursday hearing (Bloomberg, Reuters), neither of which says whether Judge Koh indicated an inclination. I'm sure that an injunction will issue, but I believe that it should be stayed with respect to the '915 pinch-to-zoom API patent and would be disappointed if a patent of such dubious validity got enforced.

What I gather from the hearing reports is that Samsung emphasized its concern over the effect an injunction would have on its newer products. The products found to infringe Apple's patents at the summer 2012 trial are no longer commercially relevant. But Apple is seeking an injunction not only against specifically-named products evaluated by the 2012 jury but also against "any other product not more than colorably different from an Infringing Product as to a feature found to infringe". The question of scope is also going to be key to the injunction Apple will presumably seek after the upcoming spring trial. Even in the case that will go to trial this spring, Samsung's currently-relevant devices are not at issue. That lawsuit was filed almost two years ago. The parties were later allowed to add certain accused products, but, for example, the Galaxy S4 was launched too late to be included. As a result, this year's Apple v. Samsung trial is not even going to be a trial about last year's products: it will, essentially, be a trial about products released in 2012 or earlier. Therefore, an injunction will be useful to Apple only if it covers newer products having the same infringement patterns.

I understand Samsung's concern about how the channel (resellers including, particularly, carriers) might be affected in its purchasing decisions by the legal uncertainty surrounding an injunction that is not limited to old, specifically-named devices but has a more inclusive scope of the "colorable difference" kind. In practical terms, I don't think the injunction Apple is currently seeking would have any reseller worried if its enforcement was stayed with respect to the '915 patent. For rubber-banding, it's clear Samsung isn't offering it anymore (it removed this feature a couple of years ago), and the tap-to-zoom-and-navigate patent doesn't matter because it can be worked around merely by ensuring that a second tap on the screen doesn't center the display around another part of, for example, a webpage. But Samsung's purported workaround for the pinch-to-zoom remains controversial between the parties, and due to heavy redactions of certain filings I haven't been able to form an opinion on Samsung's workaround theory.

So the concern about "colorable difference" is again mostly about the injunction Apple will presuambly seek after the spring trial. The patents-in-suit in that case are more technical in nature than the user interface elements at issue in the first trial. There's greater potential for enforcement disputes (i.e., disagreements on whether a purported workaround really is a workaround) in that context.

While I understand Samsung's concern, the two most important questions are what the law says about the scope of patent injunctions and what workable options exist under the law. Google's counsel in the Android-Java copyright case said a few years ago that smartphones are like "cabbage" and have a shelf life of "about six months". Regardless of whether one supports patent injunctions in general and software patent injunctions in particular, they exist, and a proposal that they apply only to products that are long obsolete by the time an injunction issues would render this remedy almost entirely useless in a fast-paced market such as the one for wireless devices.

The Apple-Samsung dispute has led to several appeals and some landmark decisions that now serve as important precedent in U.S. patent cases across all industries. It's fairly possible that (absent a settlement) there will be some further clarification concerning the scope of "colorable difference" injunctions. But some uncertainty will always remain.

There's one Federal Circuit decision, handed down almost three years ago, that is more relevant to the Apple-Samsung "scope" issue than any other precedent I'm aware of: the en banc opinion in TiVo v. EchoStar.

I agree with the way Apple's lawyers read that one: a patent injunction will apply to a future product (or a modified version of a specifically-named product) if the infringement pattern is essentially the same -- but other differences between a newer product and one previously found to infringe (such as a new name, a different visual appearance, updates to the operating software that relate to other features than the patented one) don't matter. That's why Apple is seeking an injunction against "any other product not more than colorably different from an Infringing Product as to a feature found to infringe" (emphasis mine).

The Federal Circuit clarified in TiVo (page 21) that "[t]he analysis must focus not on differences between randomly chosen features of the product found to infringe in the earlier infringement trial and the newly accused product, [...] but on those aspects of the accused product that were previously alleged to be, and were a basis for, the prior finding of infringement, and the modified features of the newly accused product". It goes on to say that "[s]pecifically, one should focus on those elements of the adjudged infringing products that the patentee previously contended, and proved, satisfy specific limitations of the asserted claims". Assuming that an analysis of this purposely-limited scope (excluding "randomly chosen features") results in only an insignificant difference, "a finding that the newly accused product continues to infringe the relevant claims is additionally essential for a violation of an injunction against infringement".

While there was a partial dissent (supported, notably, by Chief Judge Rader), even the dissent says "[t]he majority [of the circuit judges] correctly describes the colorable differences requirement as involving a comparison between the specific features relied upon to establish infringement and the modified features of the newly accused product on a limitation-by-limitation basis" (emphasis mine; quoted from page 23 of the dissent).

TiVo overrules explicitly, in one regard, the much older (1985) Federal Circuit opinion in KSM Fastening Systems v. HA Jones Co.. And it formally clarifies other parts. After TiVo it's rather daring to rely on KSM on any issue that TiVo explicitly addressed -- and even more so if the 2011 court was unanimous on such an issue.

These are my three key take-aways from TiVo with a view to the further Apple v. Samsung injunction proceedings:

  1. Apple is seeking an injunction of a scope that I believe is consistent with Federal Circuit law, but if Samsung disagreed, it would have to appeal (which EchoStar didn't do) the scope of the injunction immediately because a majority of the 2011 Federal Circuit held in TiVo that it's too late to complain about the vagueness and excessive breadth of an injunction in the contempt context. This may be part of the reason why Samsung places so much emphasis on scope at this stage.

  2. Samsung won't be able to point to new product names, form factors, new Android versions etc. as a defense to a contempt motion but will have to show that the specific feature found to infringe has been modified to be more than just colorably different from the same feature of the products evaluated in the 2012 trial. It could be that a workaround would be found to be more than just colorably different but would later still be found to infringe. However, this would take much longer because after the identification of such differences, Apple would need a new proceeding on the merits to establish infringement. Some of the work court did before (claim construction etc.) might be recycled, but what would be required is nothing short of a new liability determination based on a modified set of facts.

  3. The Federal Circuit did not address in TiVo whether a new equitable determination of the appropriateness of injunctive relief is needed after modifications unrelated to the specific feature found to infringe. One can interpret that silence in two ways: either it means that if you've lost on the equitable side once, you don't get a new bite at the equity apple with future infringing products, or it means that this just wasn't relevant at that stage but could be relevant now, considering that so much emphasis has been placed in the Apple-Samsung dispute on the "causal nexus" between an infringement and the alleged irreparable harm. In practical terms, I doubt that the equitable analysis would be more favorable to Samsung in, say, 2015 than it is now. We're not talking about a smartphone having been found to infringe in 2012 and a future contempt proceeding relating to, for example, an airplane that comes with the same feature. But if the competitive sitaution changed fundamentally (from the current "two-horse race" situation), there could be a new situation further down the road, and it's a legitimate question whether the Federal Circuit meant to rule out a new equitable determination even in that scenario. I wouldn't be surprised to see Samsung raise that issue on direct appeal. Such an appeal would not be resolved before the next (post-spring-trial) injunction issues.

There are, as almost always, different opinions out there. For example, Santa Clara Professor Brian Love authored an op-ed in December 2012 for TechCrunch on the impact of an Apple injunction on subsequently-released Samsung products (at that point, the Galaxy S III was the latest one). I always find his writings interesting and I often agree with him. For example, the following two sentences from a May 2013 opinion he expressed in the Wall Street Journal are great and highlight a key point that many other participants in the patent reform debate miss:

"The goal of the patent system isn't to reward all novel inventions. It is to encourage inventions that wouldn't exist without the added incentive of patent rights."

But I disagreed with him strongly on two occasions. The more recent one of the two was an amicus curiae brief in Oracle v. Google submitted by dozens of professors -- and the Federal Circuit appears to be coming down on the same side as I. The previous one was the aforementioned TechCrunch op-ed. That op-ed doesn't mention TiVo even once. It relies only on KSM as if TiVo didn't exist. Professor Love ignores that devices are covered by an injunction if they have the same infringement pattern, not if they are "essentially the same" in all sorts of other ways. He argues (in the context of the same three multi-touch software patents at issue now) that a newer device is "almost certainly" not covered and, in that context, points to the fact that it "is taller and wider, has a larger screen and rounder corners, and is sold with an operating system four versions newer than the one running on devices found to infringe at trial". Those are exactly the kinds of "randomly chosen features" a unanimous Federal Circuit held, in TiVo (26 years after KSM and the year before Professor Love's op-ed), not to matter. I don't see a get-out-of-jail-free card for Samsung here, unless the market changes so dramatically that a new equitable analysis would be warranted -- and even then (i.e., not anytime soon anyway) one would have to read TiVo in a rather defendant-friendly way.

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