New York, Jan 16 : While the focus of last week's agreement between the Federal Trade
Commission and Google Inc was search, the deal's restrictions on how Google uses
its patents could have a broader impact on the technology industry.
Under
the deal, which ended an antitrust investigation by the FTC and disappointed
many critics, Google will make only minor changes to its search
business.
But Google is also now limited in when it can seek injunctions
against products from rival companies that use certain of its
patents.
Throughout recent smartphone wars and other major patent
litigation, holders of so-called standard essential patents have been accused of
using them to bully competitors into paying high licensing rates or as leverage
in patent disputes.
The FTC's deal with Google clarifies the uncertainty
over how standard essential patents can be used, said Colleen Chien, a professor
specializing in patent law at Santa Clara University School of Law in
California.
The deal set out a process by which technology makers can
avoid injunctions and patent holders know they are going to get compensated,
Chien said. "The FTC has deflated the power of the injunction and also the
incentives to not pay that have existed."
In its case against Google, the
FTC claimed that Google and its subsidiary Motorola Mobility Inc had breached
commitments to standard-setting bodies to license its patents on terms that are
fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory. As part of the deal, Google agreed to
drop claims for injunctive relief against competitors in certain patent disputes
around the world. It also agreed to submit to the jurisdiction of a court or
arbitrator when disputes over payment rates arise.
Throughout the FTC's
investigation, Google was represented by Susan Creighton of Wilson Sonsini
Goodrich & Rosati and John Harkrider of Axinn, Veltrop & Harkrider. The
FTC retained Beth Wilkinson of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton &
Garrison.
The FTC said that the threat of injunction by a holder of an
essential patent hurts competition. The agreement with Google could be used as a
"template" for other patent disputes, it said.
Unlike a court decision,
the FTC's agreement with Google is not binding on other companies. But it could
give leverage to defendants in disputes with essential patent holders that could
be used in court.
"We know in today's world, defendants are getting more
aggressive," said Matthew Woods, an antitrust and patent attorney at Robins,
Kaplan, Miller & Ciresi. "Defendants will seize on this and tell courts that
injunctions are something the court should not even countenance."
But the
agreement with Google may not be all good news for patent users, according to
Jay Jurata, an antitrust partner at Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe, who said
that it could have unintended consequences.
The elaborate agreement
allows Google to seek injunctions against companies that are unwilling to pay
for a license on fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory terms. But the question
of when a company is considered an unwilling licensee is one that the FTC may
have unwittingly allowed holders of essential patents to manipulate, said
Jurata.
"They provided a road map for other standard essential patent
holders to engage in opportunistic behavior to paint otherwise willing licensees
as unwilling licensees," he said.
Miller of Robins Kaplan also cautioned
that the FTC's deal with Google may be unique because of the company's giant
size and dominance, which can attract the attention of regulators.
"There
are a lot litigants who aren't going to see this agreement as restraining them,
because they don't have the same portfolio as Google," Miller
said.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Google pact with FTC could affect other patent disputes
Google pact with FTC could affect other patent disputes
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