Vapor
On Monday in the Northern District of California, electronics manufacturer Lenovo filed a complaint against Nokia Technologies Oy, a wholly owned subsidiary of Nokia Corporation whose purported main purpose is to monetize the patent rights obtained by the numerous Nokia entities, for breach of contract, alleging that the defendant failed to disclose its patent rights as it was contractually obligated to do before the industry standard for video compression was frozen.
Nokia
asserted that Lenovo is “required to take a license to patents that
Nokia Oy claims to own and claims are essential to practice the H.264
video compression standard” developed by the Joint Video Team.
The
complaint noted that “(i)ndustry technical standards are sets of
technical guidelines and protocols that enable a product produced by one
manufacturer to interoperate with products produced by other
manufacturers that support the same standard.” According to the
complaint, the H.264 standard “‘was developed in response to the growing
need for higher compression of moving pictures for various applications
such as videoconferencing, digital storage media, television
broadcasting, Internet streaming, and communication.’”
These
industry standards are developed and released by standard setting
organizations (SSOs). Accordingly, “(t)he standard is then adopted (or
‘frozen’) and published for use by product suppliers.” The plaintiff
noted that after standardization, “former alternatives to perform the
standardized functions are often no longer viable substitutes for those
practicing the standard and thus no longer constrain royalties relating
to standardized technology. As a result, a patent holder may demand
royalties attributable to the inclusion of the patented technology in
the standard rather than the actual value of the patented technology.”
Lenovo
said since most SSOs have adopted intellectual property rights (IPR)
policies to minimize the risk of exploitative patents rights being used
in the standard, IPR policies “typically require participants to timely
disclose any alleged standard-essential patent rights (including rights
in pending patent applications) that might cover the technology that the
SSO is considering for standardization.”
“By requiring members
to declare any patent rights that, if adopted into the standard, might
be essential to practice the standard, members can evaluate alternative
technical proposals, decide not to include the proposed technology, and
consider other potential implications of any patents that that might
cover the various proposals,” the complaint added
Lenovo
contended that in regards to the nineteen patents-in-suit, Nokia , the
prior owner, failed to comply with its contractually obligated
disclosure of “any rights in the allegedly essential Nokia Patents to
the relevant standards-setting organization before the H.264 standard
was ‘frozen’…”
Due to this failure to disclose, the plaintiff
averred that Nokia breached its contract with the H.264
standards-setting organization, of which Lenovo is a third-party
beneficiary. Lenovo proffered that all of the patents are unenforceable
against the H.264 standard because Nokia allegedly breached the
California unfair competition law, since “this repeated late disclosure
was egregious” and Nokia “leveraged the allegedly standard-essential
nature of the late-disclosed Nokia Patents to obtain unjust benefits.
Lenovo is represented by Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP.
Source:lawstreetmedia.com
Author:KIRSTEN ERRICK
Editor:IPRdaily-Vapor