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        Google Buys More Than 1,000 IBM Patents, Pads IP Portfolio
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
- July 30, 2011
Google has purchased  1,030 patents from IBM  covering   server and router architectures,  chip fabrication and search technologies.
The patent purchases were recorded on July 11 and 12, according to this blog  post by SEO by the Sea, which was the first outlet to report on them. Other media outlets, including The  Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg, have subsequently received confirmations of the deal from Google.
The purchases follow Google's failed bid for more  than 6,000 Nortel patents earlier this month. Those patents instead went to a coalition consisting of  Microsoft, Apple, EMC, Ericsson, RIM and Sony, which together paid a total of $4.5 billion. Apple  contributed the most money to the purchase, thus gaining the lion's share of the Nortel patents.
 
Google provided no reason why it bought the IBM patents, but  observers have noted that Google's patent portfolio has tended to be on the thin  side, leaving it little legal maneuvering room against potential intellectual  property (IP) lawsuits. Florian Müller, an IP analyst and blogger based in Starnsberg, Germany,  noted in a  blog post that Google likely had around 700 granted patents leading up to  the IBM patents sale. 
 
Google so far has provided no apparent legal indemnity for  the Android mobile operating system, which it helped develop. Android, based on  open source Linux OS, has been a frequent target of IP legal attacks. HTC and Microsoft  agreed to a patent  royalty deal over Android use rather than resort to the courts. Motorola and Barnes  & Noble, which also use Android in mobile devices, have taken to  defending their positions in the courts against Microsoft's IP legal claims. Apple  may be an even bigger litigant over Android IP claims than Microsoft.
 
Oracle is also contesting Android use, suing Google directly  over the use of Java IP associated with Android. Oracle constitutes a tough IP  foe, as it holds more than 20,000 granted patents, Müller noted. 
 Possibly, Google's purchase of IBM's patents will give  Google a better legal defensive posture in such direct lawsuits. However,  hardware vendors using Android might still be left with little indemnity,  according to Müller.
 "This  is difficult to assess from the outside, but my feeling is that this deal can  help Google to defend itself against other patent holders if it's sued  directly," Müller postulated in the blog post. "It can serve to deter some  companies from suing Google directly. But it's hard to imagine that this deal  puts Google into such an incredibly powerful position that it can give an  intellectual property guarantee (including indemnification) to its device  makers."
 Meanwhile,  Google may be facing potential IP legal disputes on another front. A group  called MPEG LA has sent signals that it may contest IP associated with Google's  WebM project. The project promotes an open source video codec for royalty-free  use in Web sites and software media players. It's based on VP8 video codec technologies  that Google acquired from On2 Technologies. 
 MPEG LA indicated  this week that 12 of its member agreed that VP8 infringes their patents,  according to statements  given to StreamingMedia.com. That  decision follows a meeting set up to decide the matter in February. MPEG LA  members include companies such as Microsoft, Apple, Cisco, Hewlett-Packard, and Sony, among others. 
 
Google is  currently forming a WebM Community Cross-License initiative, aimed at defending  VP8. Under this initiative, members agree to cross-license IP that may be  associated with WebM at no charge to other members. 
 
In March, it  was reported that the U.S. Department of Justice and the California State  Attorney General's office were investigating whether  MPEG LA was thwarting competition, specifically with regard to the VP8  codec. It appears nothing has surfaced yet with regard to that investigation. 
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.