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19 May 2013, 1:06 am by Sai Vinod
A patent hold-up occurs when the patentee discloses information on their patented technology only after its incorporation into a standard to command higher royalties. [read post]
26 Mar 2013, 1:00 pm by Florian Mueller
If people have misconceptions about the value of the innovation behind and protected by SEPs, it's usually because they focus on the importance of what a technique does (for example, a handover between two base stations in a cellular network) rather than the fact that there may be, and often are, countless other ways to achieve the same effect, just that all those alternative solutions wouldn't be interoperable because the standard prescribes, for example, only one handover mechanism.Intel… [read post]
16 Mar 2013, 12:07 pm by Florian Mueller
If the patented technology (incorporated into the standard) is not successful, the technology is replaced or improved or the standard is abandoned. [read post]
7 Oct 2021, 4:20 am by Annsley Merelle Ward
” 10  Indeed, the court held “as a matter of law that in this case, the baseband processor is the proper smallest salable patent-practicing unit” for the purpose of determining a royalty.11Moreover, in motions to transfer, the location of chip suppliers has received heavy weight because of the importance of chipsets to infringement analysis. 12Similarly, in litigation where cellular network equipment has been accused of infringing SEPs, providers of… [read post]
30 Jun 2018, 10:20 am by Keith Mallinson
Thousands of negotiated and executed licensing agreements, including cross-licenses, with various terms in addition to royalty rates—all underpinned by billions of dollars paid annually over many years—much better reflect how patent-protected value is generated and exchanged.Device manufacturers, network operators, over-the-top (OTT) service providers and end users derive enormous value from extensive and easily-available technologies in published standards from… [read post]
18 Dec 2019, 2:13 am by Keith Mallinson
They do that because costs are recovered from their financial returns on selling products and services that incorporate those technologies. [read post]
6 Nov 2023, 8:42 am by Keith Mallinson
Some industry participants are dependent on generating licensing royalties, others move fast and succeed in downstream product markets by licensing-in standard-essential technologies and incorporating semiconductor chips and other components that already include them. [read post]
30 Nov 2011, 10:21 am
Lemko is asking for compensation for the loss of royalties as well as unspecified damages. [read post]
14 Jul 2022, 10:22 am by James Kwong
The most relevant instance has been the injunction recently issued by HHJ Pelling QC in the case brought by Lavinia Deborah Osbourne against OpenSea (DBA of “Ozone Networks”). [read post]
5 Sep 2013, 12:25 pm by Barry Barnett
The dispute involved patents that Microsoft holds on technologies relating to wireless local area networks and video coding. [read post]
26 Sep 2016, 8:37 am
In 1983, Indian law was amended to incorporate these compulsory licensing provisions into Sections 32, 32A and 32B of the Copyright Act. [read post]
16 Dec 2020, 12:50 am by Chijioke Okorie
The WNO is part of a network of WIPO External Offices and supports WIPO’s cooperation and services in Nigeria. [read post]
2 Apr 2020, 1:41 pm by Florian Mueller
But it would never stop if everyone argued "use-based pricing" as long as technology improves here, there, and everywhere, or gets incorporated into a bigger end product. [read post]
29 Oct 2013, 6:01 am by Florian Mueller
Motorola Mobility anti-suit action in the Southern District of California, in which Apple is asking the court to bar the wholly-owned Google subsidiary from asserting cellular standard-essential patents (SEPs) against Apple products incorporating Qualcomm chips (except in the same district or in Germany, where a license agreement is in place based on a royalty rate to be determined by a court). [read post]